It was actually an American who made me make this topic. After watching Marcus brigstock make an American joke or two he said "Boston has been my home since i was born...not sure whether to laugh and enjoy how he choose this place to represent America, or get annoyed that he is making fun of this place. ah fuck him, Mr. English stereotype."Woodsey said:The Wykydtron said:Funny how "falling off a chair" is shorthand for "laughing at yourself" because it is almost the most embarrassing thing you can do with your clothes on.
You could shit yourself, or do lots of other more embarrassing things with your clothes on. Most of them involve bodily fluids, admittedly.
OT: Can't stand people with no sense of self-awareness or irony about themselves. I moved into halls recently, and there's this one guy who tells us all the same stories over and over again, so now we've taken to interjecting jokey and slightly snide comments. He just looks slightly bemused for a split-second and carries on from exactly where he was.
I hear Americans have some problems with that though - I think it's where the whole, "they don't understand sarcasm" thing comes from. As in, they'll take something as a sleight as opposed to everyone understanding that everyone's fair game for a piss take. Could just be made up still.
What he said about Boston was "WHOOO, HOME OF THE RED SOCKS, U.S.A! U.S.A!" ...
I have also heard Reginald D Hunter say "British people have a lot of sub text and you like irony and sarcasm, tongue in cheek ... you know, clever ways to be indirect about what you think".