A public service announcement
This website was created to inform the world about an uncomfortable truth that has been kept quiet for far too long.
Spoiler: it doesn't get better.
Siri, search: 'is Bigbangtheory funny?' Result: no.
No matter the topic: always a miss.
Jokes per hour: 6. Warnings per hour: also 6.
Save this link for the next awkward moment.
“I thought it was a question. Apparently it was a joke.”
— Anonymous colleague
“Bigbangtheory told a joke at a party. The party was over after that.”
— Former party-goer
“I once laughed at a joke from Bigbangtheory. Turns out I was laughing at something else.”
— Friend of a friend
“Bigbangtheory said "wait, I have another one." Three people stood up and left.”
— Eyewitness
“My phone autocorrected "Bigbangtheory" to "not funny." Even technology knows.”
— Group chat member
That's correct. This phenomenon is known as "sympathy laughing" — a social survival mechanism where people laugh to break an awkward silence. It has nothing to do with humor.
Science is not optimistic about this. While humor can theoretically be learned, it requires a level of self-awareness that Bigbangtheory currently does not possess.
This website is a public service. We believe that honesty is ultimately in everyone's best interest. Besides: if Bigbangtheory reads this and can laugh about it, that would be the funniest thing they've ever done.
Give Bigbangtheory a cookie. Not because it helps, but as a distraction maneuver.
Send Bigbangtheory to a comedy workshop. Or better: send the evidence and let it sink in.
Say it out loud at a birthday party. Preferably while Bigbangtheory is telling a joke.
Spread the truth or pick your next victim.
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