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Friar's Club Encyclopedia of Jokes

Page 43

by Barry Dougherty


  One afternoon he was sitting on the beach and wishing for some more men to share his duties when he caught sight of a man waving from a life raft that was bobbing on the waves. Phillips swam out, pulled the raft to shore, and did a little jig of happiness. “You can’t believe how happy I am to see you,” he cried.

  The new fellow eyed him up and down and cooed, “You’re a sight for sore eyes, too, you gorgeous thing.”

  “Shit,” sighed Phillips, “there go my Sundays.”

  First employee: So, is your job secure?

  Second employee: Oh, yes. It’s me they can do without.

  A conference is a gathering of important people who singly can do nothing but together can decide that nothing can be done.

  —FRED ALLEN

  Business meetings are important—because they’re one way of demonstrating how many people the company can operate without.

  The nearest customer was five stools away, but that didn’t keep Josh from leaning over toward the bartender and commenting, “Geez, there’s a lousy smell in here.” A few minutes later he added, “It smells just like . . . shit.” Puzzled by the origin of the stench, he moved closer to the other customer, and sure enough, the smell worsened. “Phew, you really stink,” he pointed out.

  “I know,” said the man apologetically. “It’s because of my job.” Seeing that Josh was interested in a further explanation, he went on, “I’m with an elephant act, and before each show I have to give the elephant an enema so he doesn’t take a dump during the performance. Frankly, it’s a tricky business, because I have to administer it quickly and then jump back. And sometimes I just don’t move fast enough.”

  “Jesus,” commiserated Josh, shaking his head. “How much do they pay you for this lousy job?”

  “Eighty-five bucks a week,” said the man cheerfully.

  “You’ve got to be kidding. Why don’t you quit?”

  “What?” retorted the man, “and get out of show business?!”

  How can I retire? I still have three hundred glossy pictures and two hundred dollars worth of makeup left.

  —MILTON BERLE

  I got a job as a short-order cook. I was cooking a chicken on the rotisserie, I was turning the wheel, and I was singing “Arrive-derci, Roma,” and a drunk came by and said, “You’ve got a nice voice, but your monkey’s on fire.”

  —LONDON LEE

  He and I had an office so tiny that an inch smaller and it would have been adultery.

  —DOROTHY PARKER

  Guidelines for Bureaucrats:

  1. When in charge, ponder.

  2. When in trouble, delegate.

  3. When in doubt, mumble.

  “Working hard, Stan?”

  “Nah, I’m fooling the boss,” replied the laborer with a wink. “He thinks I’m working, but I’m carrying the same load of cement up and down all day.”

  Well, we can’t stand around here doing nothing, people will think we’re workmen.

  —SPIKE MILLIGAN

  The six phases of a project:

  1. Enthusiasm

  2. Disillusionment

  3. Panic and hysteria

  4. Search for the guilty

  5. Punishment of the innocent

  6. Praise and honor for the nonparticipants

  “So tell me, Ms. Harris,” asked the interviewer, “have you any other skills you think might be worth mentioning?”

  “Actually, yes,” said the applicant modestly. “Last year I had two short stories published in national magazines, and I finished a novel.”

  “Very impressive,” he commented, “but I was thinking of skills you could apply during office hours.”

  The applicant explained brightly, “Oh, that was during office hours.”

  “All the other presidents did what I told them. This one thinks he’s bigger than Winchell,” complained Walter Winchell about Harry Truman one night at the Stork Club. “We had a lulu of an argument yesterday and he hasn’t called me to at least say he’s sorry.”

  “Walter, why don’t you call him,” suggested Joey Adams. “He’s a pretty busy man, he’s the president of the United States of America, he’s got a big country to run.”

  “He’s busy?” he screamed. “He’s busy? Does he have six columns and a radio show to get out every week?”

  —JOEY ADAMS, ABOUT WALTER WINCHELL

  “Now tell me, Miss Gundell,” asked the senior partner to the very junior employee, “what is the main purpose of a holiday?”

  “To impress upon the employees that the company can get along without them,” she responded promptly.

  Work is the greatest thing in the world, so we should always save some of it for tomorrow.

  —DON HEROLD

  The boss looked over the efficiency report on the new employee and added a few words of his own. “Hedges is a definite asset to the firm. She is efficient, discreet, energetic, creative, and—best of all—she makes the other people in her department very nervous.”

  I used to have a job in the Kotex factory. I thought I was making mattresses for mice.

  —RAY SCOTT

  Two dimwitted ditch diggers got upset because they did all the hard work and received only one-tenth of the pay of the crew boss. Finally, deciding to confront his boss, one guy climbed out of the ditch and went over to the foreman, who was leaning against a tree, reading the racing form.

  “How come we do all the hard work while you sit here and earn ten times as much?” he demanded.

  “Intelligence,” was the crew boss’s answer. “Let me give you an example.” He put his hand in front of the tree. “See my hand? Hit it as hard as you can.” The ditch digger took a mighty swing, the boss moved his hand at the last minute, and commented to the worker, now clutching his bruised fist, “See what I mean?”

  Back in the ditch, the second guy eagerly questioned his friend. “It’s a matter of intelligence,” was the reply. “Let me give you an example: hit my hand as hard as you can.” And he held it up in front of his face.

  Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn’t the work he is supposed to be doing at that moment.

  —ROBERT BENCHLEY

  According to the latest statistics, there are [current figure] million Americans who aren’t working. And there are plenty more if you count the ones with jobs.

  Sexual harassment at work—is it a problem for the self-employed?

  —VICTORIA WOOD

  The worse job I ever had was working in a Fotomat booth. I was the only one at the Christmas party.

  —MARK DOBRIENT

  Index

  Ace, Goodman, 211

  Achard, Marcel, 444

  Adams, Franklin P., 17, 330

  Adams, Joey, 13, 14, 18, 20, 34, 35, 36, 37, 68, 69, 83, 95, 102, 104, 115, 116, 118, 120, 126, 128, 154, 178, 179, 184, 193, 208, 235, 236, 242, 343, 345, 346, 387, 390, 419, 421, 453, 457, 458, 460, 467, 478, 479, 492, 503

  Addams, Charles, 217

  Ali, Muhammed, 239

  Allen, Dolly, 228

  Allen, Fred, 48, 62, 72, 73, 192, 221, 484, 501

  Allen, Gracie, 46, 49, 180, 241, 344, 394

  Allen, Joey, 221

  Allen, Marty, 237, 340

  Allen, Steve, 74, 394

  Allen, Woody, 44, 58, 72, 93, 95, 102, 114, 146, 196, 197, 324, 342, 371, 389, 390, 432, 433, 474, 487, 496, 497

  Altman, Jeff, 183, 427

  Amis, Martin, 474

  Amoros, Larry, 38

  Amsterdam, Morey, 37

  Andrews, Andy, 77, 238

  Arden, Eve, 90

  Astor, Dave, 136

  Astor, Nancy, 137

  Attell, Dave, 87, 483

  Aykroyd, Dan, 247

  Babbit, Karen, 74

  Backus, Jim, 125

  Baer, Arthur (Bugs), 124

  Baily, Jim, 53, 181

  Baker, Russell, 107

  Bakker, Tammy Faye, 485

  Ball, Lucille, 360

  Bankhead, Tallulah, 241, 340

&nbs
p; Banks, Dr. Murray, 93

  Banks, Heywood, 101, 207

  Barner, Bill, 76

  Barry, Dave, 294, 428, 448, 453

  Barry, Lynda, 109, 290

  Barrymore, John, 383

  Barth, Belle, 413

  Baylos, Gene, 83, 104, 250, 382, 432

  Bean, Orson, 31, 277, 280

  Bednob, Gerry, 418

  Bellamy, Guy, 286

  Belushi, Jim, 312, 464

  Benchley, Robert, 37, 88, 190, 343, 363, 504

  Benner, Richard, 197

  Benny, Jack, 86, 94, 360, 457, 492

  Berle, Milton, 73, 95, 96, 157, 158, 159, 160, 192, 200, 236, 237, 265, 306, 314, 346, 362, 365, 378, 419, 431, 502

  Berman, Shelley, 93, 196

  Bernie, Al, 95

  Berra, Yogi, 339

  Best, Larry, 49

  Billings, Josh, 83, 369

  Binder, Mike, 146

  Bishop, Joey, 92, 94, 128, 423

  Black, Lewis, 70, 147, 376

  Blaze, Tommy, 44

  Bluestone, Ed, 121

  Bogart, Humphrey, 139

  Bombeck, Erma, 34, 52, 88, 123, 128, 238, 373, 374, 455

  Bonaparte, Napoleon, 247

  Boosler, Elayne, 103, 231

  Borge, Victor, 347

  Borgnine, Ernest, 51

  Bradbury, Robert, 180

  Brando, Marlon, 14

  Brecht, Bertolt, 240

  Brenner, David, 354

  Breslin, Jimmy, 140

  Brickman, Marshall, 125, 196, 390

  Brinkley, David, 418

  Brooks, Foster, 46, 229

  Brooks, Mel, 118, 340, 431

  Brown, A. Whitney, 375

  Brown, Bo, 198

  Brown, Joe E., 42

  Brown, Rita Mae, 111

  Buchwald, Art, 77

  Bunker, Archie, 310

  Burns, George, 17, 46, 49, 94, 139, 179, 180, 241, 360, 363, 410

  Burns, Jack, 77

  Buttons, Red, 43, 72, 92, 94, 95, 100, 103, 108, 192, 229, 289, 302, 334, 374, 376, 385, 387, 465

  Byner, John, 98

  Callas, Charlie, 96

  Callas, Maria, 150

  Calman, Mel, 391

  Cantor, Eddie, 152

  Capri, Dick, 186, 323

  Carlin, George, 27, 74, 119, 145, 227, 487

  Carroll, Jean, 38, 483

  Carson, Johnny, 118, 119, 226, 353, 462

  Carter, Judy, 50

  Cavanagh, Tim, 193

  Ceisler, Rich, 419

  Celeste, Jimi, 35

  Cho, Margaret, 230, 242

  Clark, Blake, 478

  Clark, Jackie, 78

  Cobbett, William, 380

  Coburn, Charles, 155

  Cohan, George M., 352

  Cohen, Jack, 41

  Cohen, Marty, 344

  Cohen, Myron, 368, 464

  Cohn, Harry, 345

  Cohn, Roy, 153

  Colbert, Stephen, 340, 377

  Colson, Charles, 377

  Connolly, Billy, 35

  Connolly, Cyril, 311

  Coolidge, Calvin, 117, 444

  Cooper, Jilly, 329

  Cooper, Pat, 96

  Corey, Professor Irwin, 226

  Coronel, William, 409

  Corso, Rick, 408

  Cotter, Tom, 28, 108, 167, 185, 430, 449

  Cotter, Wayne, 23

  Coward, Noel, 325

  Crisp, Quentin, 198

  Crosby, Norm, 13, 37, 116, 158, 163, 179, 213, 230, 237, 296, 349, 367, 384, 427, 432, 447, 467, 468

  Crothers, Samuel McChord, 491

  Crystal, Billy, 82, 95, 96, 312, 432, 464

  cummings, e.e., 191

  Cuppy, Will, 107, 462

  Curtin, Jane, 400

  Curtis, Danny, 30

  Dana, Bill, 263, 361, 446

  Dangerfield, Rodney, 371

  Darian, Ron, 39

  Dark, Johnny, 149

  Daugherty, Duffy, 455

  Davis, Sammy, Jr., 95

  de Kooning, Willem, 379

  De Vries, Peter, 62, 96, 287, 310

  DeGeneres, Ellen, 191, 462

  Dewar, James, 290

  Diamond, Selma, 226

  Dickson, Paul, 146

  Diller, Phyllis, 53, 181, 242

  Dobrient, Mark, 505

  Dodd, Ken, 344

  Donleavy, J.P., 466

  Douglas, Jack, 97

  Dreesen, Tom, 406, 429

  Dubac, Bob, 476

  Dugan, Mike, 94

  Durst, Will, 40

  Eastman, Max, 37

  Ebert, Roger, 82

  Edmonton, Jimmy (Professor Backwards), 478

  Einstein, Albert, 485

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 44

  Elmer, Billy, 182

  Elstner, Chas, 249

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 84, 490

  Engvall, Will, 76

  Ephron, Nora, 378

  Fanshawe, Simon, 440

  Feiffer, Jules, 97, 379

  Feirstein, Bruce, 328

  Feldman, Marty, 356

  Fields, W.C., 138, 140, 369, 380

  Fitzsimmons, Greg, 205, 224

  Flanders, Michael, 194, 199

  Fonseca, Chris, 180

  Ford, “Senator” Ed, 217

  Forfleet, Susan, 51

  Forster, E.M., 466

  Foster, Glenn, 480

  Foster, Phil, 36

  Foxworthy, Jeff, 372, 430

  Frisco, Joey, 43, 73, 211

  Frost, David, 290

  Frost, Robert, 466

  Gabor, Zsa Zsa, 153, 311

  Gaffigan, Jim, 166, 481

  Gale, Alan, 350

  Gallagher, Jack, 360

  Gardner, Ava, 476

  Gardner, Ed, 346

  Garofalo, Janeane, 430

  Garrett, Brad, 418

  Gayle, Jackie, 73

  Giraldo, Greg, 308, 399

  Glasgow, Ellen, 85

  Gleason, Jackie, 122, 353

  Gobel, George, 315

  Goldwyn, Samuel, 484

  Gordon, Bob, 64

  Gottfried, Gilbert, 108, 396, 485

  Graham, Ronny, 349

  Grant, Cary, 150

  Gray, Simon, 313

  Greenburg, Dan, 261

  Greene, Shecky, 93

  Gregory, Dick, 104, 226, 453, 479

  Grier, David Alan, 94

  Grizzard, Louis, 417

  Guitry, Sacha, 248

  Hackett, Buddy, 30, 129, 401

  Hale, Arthur, 272

  Hall, Arsenio, 444

  Hall, Rich, 465

  Halsey, Margaret, 331

  Handey, Jack, 87, 395

  Hansome, Rhonda, 99

  Harris, Bob, 144

  Harrison, Rex, 359

  Harvey, Alan, 453

  Hays, Brooks, 344

  Hedberg, Mitch, 15, 138, 197

  Heilscher, Newt, 173

  Henry, Bert, 128

  Herbert, Alan, 444

  Herold, Don, 347, 503

  Hershfield, Harry, 115, 352

  Hoff, Syd, 331

  Hollerbach, Kit, 52, 198

  Holliday, Billy, 103

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Sr., 312

  Hope, Bob, 55, 61, 83, 94, 95, 194, 227, 228, 289, 307, 333, 413, 443, 457, 465, 483, 484, 488

  Hubbard, Elbert, 343

  Hubbard, Kin, 123, 239, 305, 325, 443, 473, 499

  Hull, Josephine, 13

  Humphrey, Hubert, 81

  Hutchins, Robert Maynard, 191

  Ireland, Bill, 75

  Irrera, Dom, 185

  Jackson, Michael, 79

  James, Clive, 85

  James, Kevin, 192, 487

  Jena, Jeffrey, 86

  Jeni, Richard, 55, 123, 345, 396

  Jerrold, Douglas, 290

  Jessel, George, 88, 91

  Jett, Joan, 498

  Jones, Franklin P., 38, 484

  Jordan, Will, 17

  Juhl, Jerry, 77

  Kaliban, Bob, 458

  Kamen, Milt, 40,
200

  Kannon, Jackie, 294

  Katz, Jonathan, 435

  Kauffman, Lionel M., 87

  Kauffmann, Max, 111, 340, 408, 445

  Kaufman, George S., 279

  Kelton, Bobby, 418

  Kennedys, The, 79

  Kerouac, Jack, 398

  Kerr, Clark, 147

  Kerr, Jean, 52, 311

  Kiley, Brian, 62

  King, Alan, 50, 158, 291

  Kirby, Bruce, 233

  Kirchenbauer, Bill, 258

  Klein, Robert, 53

  Knebel, Fletcher, 489

  Koch, Danny, 443

  Kolinsky, Sue, 54, 110, 409

  Ladman, Cathy, 262, 364

  LaGreca, Angela, 182

  Lang, Andrew, 491

  Lardner, Ring, 198

  Larkin, Philip, 489

  Laurie, Joe, Jr., 496

  Lebowitz, Fran, 53, 88, 146, 196, 432, 448, 482

  Lee, Gypsy Rose, 18

  Lee, London, 272, 342, 445, 502

  Lee, Robert G., 374

  Leifer, Carol, 90, 110, 307

  Lemmon, Jack, 80

  Lennon, John, 240

  Leno, Jay, 98, 227, 352

  Leonard, Hugh, 200

  Leonard, Jack E., 99

  Leonard, Sugar Ray, 477

  Letterman, David, 13, 38, 353, 440

  Levant, Oscar, 321

  Levenson, Sam, 86, 181

  Lewis, Jerry, 96

  Lewis, Joe E., 95, 123, 136, 140, 210, 457

  Lewis, Richard, 187, 262, 371

  Liebman, Wendy, 33, 77, 112, 343

  Lillie, Bea, 488

  Lincoln, Abraham, 444

  Linkletter, Art, 18, 361

  Little, Mary Wilson, 314

  Lombardo, Guy, 483

  Loren, Sophia, 181

  Louis C.K., 166, 297

  Mabley, Moms, 98, 363

  MacDonald, Norm, 224

  Maher, Bill, 297, 413, 427

  Maldonado, Linda, 55

  Mandel, Howie, 46, 105, 194

  Mantel, Henriette, 236

  Maron, Marc, 446

  Marquis, Don, 62, 484

  Martin, Dean, 140

  Martin, Dick, 52, 311

  Martin, H., 20

  Martin, Steve, 33, 61, 419

  Marx, Chico, 209

  Marx, Groucho, 62, 111, 179, 209, 235, 266, 307, 346, 364, 374, 496

  Marx, Harpo, 321

  Mason, Tom, 181

  Maugham, W. Somerset, 290

  Mayer, Louis B., 207, 351

  McEnroe, Colin, 99

  McGee, Molly, 306

  McGill, Donald, 33

  McKay, Hal, 409

  McLaughlin, Mignon, 63, 305

  Mencken, H.L., 83, 84, 96, 107, 257, 346, 394, 499

  Mendoza, John, 76, 223

 

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