
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The first documented bar joke was copied onto a clay tablet 4,000 years ago in the ancient language of Sumerian. Scholars have translated it, but the meaning remains lost. After the Twitter account @DepthsOfWiki posted the joke in March, thousands of people attempted to decipher it to no avail.
Yet, as cryptic as the bar joke may be, it offers clues into humor’s role in human civilizations and raises questions about when humor — and its sibling laughter — first emerged.
In this episode, the second of two parts, Endless Thread continues its journey attempting to deconstruct the beginnings of humor and explain an unexplainable joke from the forgotten tablets of the past.
4.1
25812,581 ratings
The first documented bar joke was copied onto a clay tablet 4,000 years ago in the ancient language of Sumerian. Scholars have translated it, but the meaning remains lost. After the Twitter account @DepthsOfWiki posted the joke in March, thousands of people attempted to decipher it to no avail.
Yet, as cryptic as the bar joke may be, it offers clues into humor’s role in human civilizations and raises questions about when humor — and its sibling laughter — first emerged.
In this episode, the second of two parts, Endless Thread continues its journey attempting to deconstruct the beginnings of humor and explain an unexplainable joke from the forgotten tablets of the past.
3,901 Listeners
43,786 Listeners
90,766 Listeners
6,862 Listeners
26,167 Listeners
37,229 Listeners
27,364 Listeners
5,661 Listeners
16,413 Listeners
2,179 Listeners
3,912 Listeners
14,987 Listeners
9,300 Listeners
2,070 Listeners
3,537 Listeners
15,877 Listeners
5,096 Listeners
1,390 Listeners
4,040 Listeners
216 Listeners
78 Listeners
3,143 Listeners
530 Listeners