At the end of this segment, Hyatt chimes in, noting that it's already a musical (with Hyatt's enigmatic personality, it may be variant 4 or 5, though). They conduct this argument while singing the melodies of the series' music. In the beginning of the 26th episode of Excel♡Saga, Excel has an argument with director Nabeshin about making a musical episode (musicals, after all, take a lot of effort to produce).It gets to the point that the caption itself is its own Running Gag. Every single time this occurs, there's a little caption box that says something like "Miu has a habit of throwing anyone standing behind her". Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple has a Running Gag that if anyone comes up behind Miu, she'll throw them. ![]() Resolved Noodle Incident can lead to this when the explanation is less entertaining than the original mystery was. Deliberate use of the trope is a common stable in Anti-Humor. May be the outcome of Poe's Law, when a satire/parody fails because the audience didn't realise it is a satire/parody and took it seriously. Compare Lampshaded Double Entendre and Euphemism Buster, "Just Joking" Justification. Or better yet, imply the second interpretation with a short sentence.Ī Sub-Trope of Measuring the Marigolds. It's only explaining the joke's primary interpretation that ruins it. ![]() However, explaining a joke using a less-than-obvious Alternative Joke Interpretation can mean that explaining a joke can get a second laugh out of the same joke. "See, it's funny because now it's his turn in the barrel! Hee-haw-hee-haw." We laugh at this jackass, for reasons we all know and need not discuss, as we are too wise to explain the obvious. Occasionally in this case, where the joke does work, an audience member will guffaw and burst out with an explanation of why they are laughing.
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