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Here’s what I learned from Happy To Help: Adventures of a People Pleaser by Amy Wilson:
Include your fantasies. It’s especially funny if you can incorporate four levels in the build up to the punchline:
First: set the scene—what’s about to happen
Second: set the stakes—why is this a big deal
Third: fantasy/a positive hypothetical of what’s to come
Fourth: Dialogue/action of what actually transpired
Write a short and snappy analogy that has pronouns and alliteration: “It was like hiring Kidz Bop for a bachelor party.”
Include proper nouns. Proper nouns that are personal to you make the writing more compelling, specific, and yes, even funny: “I used to make fun of my husband for letting his perception of a good night's sleep be ruined by what his Whoop told him.”