
New Books in Popular Culture Elliott Kalan, "Joke Farming: How to Write Comedy and Other Nonsense" (U Chicago Press, 2025)
Dec 4, 2025
Elliott Kalan, a seasoned comedy writer known for his work on The Daily Show, shares insights from his book, "Joke Farming: How to Write Comedy and Other Nonsense." He emphasizes that successful joke writing combines method with creativity, debunking the myth of effortless inspiration. Kalan explains the importance of audience response, crafting a joke from absurdity, and the impact of specific wording. He also discusses the delicate balance of satire and humor, urging writers to find their authentic voice while remaining entertaining.
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Build Jokes With A Repeatable Process
- Reverse-engineer how spontaneous jokes form by identifying the core absurdity first.
- Then build a short premise, structure information deliberately, refine wording, and test with an audience.
Revision Is Part Of Genius
- The romantic idea of the muse hides the extensive revision behind good writing.
- Even canonical writers cross things out, so practice and rewriting are normal parts of craft.
Comedy Is Just Focused Communication
- Comedy writing and prose share the same goal: move an idea from your head into another's.
- Jokes are discrete communication units that must transmit clearly to succeed.














