@@Shinkus My two favorite comedians. Both died way too young. RIP to those two legends. I don't think I'll ever laugh at anything as much as I did when listening to those two.
Actually it should be about the joke. If I commit to pissing in your face, it’s still pissing in your face. I don’t get to ask you to appreciate my “commitment”. There has to actually be a joke behind it. But what do you expect from a guy who’s entire career is based on screaming. And what do you expect from people who think screaming is entertaining.
The lead in to this (which isn't in the video) really makes it. Gilbert had made an off colour joke about 9/11 and slightly lost the crowd and just launched into this. Basically doubling down on bad taste and killed it.
I feel like this is the kind of joke only a man like Gilbert Gottfried could do, he's got the voice and that sheer volume of confidence that no other comedian could ever dream of having
every stand up has done this joke at some point, at least until recent years. every standup has their own version of it, and take great pleasure in telling it to each other. Penn & Teller made an entire documentary about the joke... but yes, the definitive version is Gilberts.
@@DrinkWater713 I have absolutely no idea why this is supposed to be funny or entertaining in any way. It doesn't take courage or insight to spew profanity.
When asked to say Grace over the holiday meal - start the prayer by saying "A talent agent is sitting in his office..." They will never bother you with that task again.
With the punchline as whatever religion you are being asked to pray about. What's you act called? The Jehovah's Witnesses. Guaranteed histarics if the whole family is involved in that religion. For you not them.
If I remember correctly this was like September 30 or early October 2001 first week of October 2001 in that time frame. We needed a laugh really bad. And Gilbert delivered
Gilbert delivered a 9/11 joke just before this one and the audience groaned. This joke was meant to 'make up' for it. Some have said he was the first person ever to make a 9/11 joke on a public stage.
The joke goes back to the days of vaudville. It's generally shared among other comedians and it's sort of a shaggy dog story where the idea is to be as filthy as you can be with the setup. Several comedians do the joke, each in their own way.
The setup is a big part of it, but the punchline is also a legit joke. A person might think we would look up to "elites" in our society, and want to be like them, and have what they have. Calling the act "The Aristocrats" is a way of saying "our elites are garbage, we shouldn't want to be like them, we should be disgusted by them." It says "I don't believe CNN, I don't believe MSBNC, I don't think celebrities are interesting, I don't think our government is run by great people who are more talented than me."
Then maybe it's about time Aladdin the animated Series is released onto complete DVD collection just like the original The Proud Family Series to honour the memories of Gilbert Gottfried who was the voice of Iago.
This is a very, very old joke, and the punchline is essentially meaningless to a modern audience. But there are two possible interpretations that could indicate what made it funny back in the day. (A) In the context of the world of the early 1900's, Aristocrats were understood to to be gentile, I.E. above anything crass, crude or "low". To get a faint echo of how this worked, try to imagine the current queen of England, in real life, farting loudly and then waving her hands about and shouting "better open a window gang, that was a ripe one!" with a horse-laugh. This would be shockingly incongruous, even today. Our firmly held expectations of that persons behaviour would be completely confounded. , and therefore we might well find it funny. Just as it confounded the expectations of an audience in 1910 that these depraved and salacious "performers" would be labelled aristocrats. Possible explanation (B) is almost a mirror image of -A-, it suggests that the gentry (aristocrats) were known to be libertines who enjoyed pleasures and lifestyles that the great masses could only dream about. By and large these pleasures being drinking, gambling, work-free existence, an endless round of entertainments, perhaps "taking advantage" of low-born farm girls or trollopes. In this context, the "performance" of the vaudevillians is such a ridiculously depraved exaggeration of these kinds of things, that it becomes a rather shocking lampoon and commentary on the aristocracy when the groups name is revealed.
Super sad but true. At least for me since I NEVER used to watch his stuff until quite literally right after I heard about his death. I feel really guilty about it but at the same time I’m glad I eventually got to watch his comedy stuff because he was super funny. Rip to Gilbert Gottfried ♥️
his own jokes killed him, and probably a lot of the audience too. he went way too far way too often, but was unafraid of and unapologetic to any backlash he received from the audiences he entertained. in some ways, he can be immortalized as the arch-nemesis of the sterile, toxic woke culture we're now living in and suffering from. he basically spat in it's eye until he was dehydrated.
@@evictioncarpentry2628 Yeah, I got that much, but is the Aristocrats a specific group he's making fun of or is it just aristocrats in general? Either way, what does incest have to do with them?
@@aronb6746 "The Aristocrats" is just a way to finish the joke, like taking a bow, it's not the joke per se nor does it have much relevance to the joke. The joke is how incredibly grotesque and taboo you can make the scenario.
@@KKmanmi No, the joke is that elitists or "aristocrats" are fked up corrupt, disgusting, immoral, degenerate, grotesque human beings who live in their own world far removed from normal society and they actually do this sort of thing. Ever heard of a dubai porta potty? Look it up. The joke says the most effed up crap imaginable just to illustrate how disgusting elitists and governments are.
If you’ve never heard the joke, you won’t get the joke. If you don’t get the joke, the joke is on you. If you are familiar with the joke, you get the joke. It really is a joke that belongs to pro comedians but anyone familiar with its history can appreciate it.
I googled it, and the concensus seems to be that its just an outlandish very taboo joke. Apparently theres also an element of it being a hard joke to do properly, but past that i dont see how your comment, which really seems to make it out to be a deep thing, actually applies. The joke dosent have any hidden meaning at all, it is what it is on the surface, gross and taboo
So for future context on this for those who don't remember or weren't around when this happened, this happened extremely close to 9/11. The entire city was still recovering from it, and they barely got this show together. The comedians all knew that it might have been a rough night, and at some points it was. Even Gilbert was having issues getting a laugh, so he ended up just leaning into this joke so hard he fell in a hole. And it changed the entire mood of the night. For a lot of people there, it may have been one of the most needed laugh of their lives.
No frame of reference for the punchline, and I'm sure it had some meaning, but the delivery was on point. So after some research: the joke is really old, (like 1920s old) and the aristocracy was the high society people, who could do whatever they wanted because they had money and power. So the common family in the joke, do the depraved stuff and tell the agent we are basically mimicking the Aristocrats. Given that context, he shoulda said "The Hefners"!, just to bring the joke into the 2000s. I still loved it.
It’s a joke that comedians will tell each other to make the most vulgar story possible. There isn’t really a punch line, it’s always :someone goes to the talent agent, horrible/horrific performance art/pornographic imagery and finishes by saying they are the Aristocrats. They is a whole documentary on it (called the Aristocrats) where they interview comedians and some tell there version. It’s very good, this seems to be editing from the movie
I BEEN LOOKING FOR THIS CLIP FOR YEARS! He said this joke because he upset a lot of people with a 9-11 joke when it had just happen like only 3 weeks ago back in 2001. He was really confused why the crowd legit was acting that way. One yelled out "TOO SOON!" So... he decided he need to win the crowd back over with that joke. Not even joking look it up.
Most comedians know this old joke. Most never do it. It's very hard to get it right, and timing is everything for this one. Almost all the comics on the stage and in the audience knew this old joke and were dying as Gilbert launched into it.
The joke itself isn't funny at all. But Gottfried's delivery (and just the fact that its Gilbert Gottfried); that one guy losing it; the quiet commentator observing this like a golf game; and the fact that this was how he saved himself after his failed 9/11 joke, are what makes this a gem.
Gilbert Gottfried's passion, voice and delivery were what made him great (along with his absolute fearlessness about anyone disliking what he had to say); his actual comedic ability and attempts at jokes were limited, at best.
@@hobomike6935 It was the persona he created, his stage character, that was really funny. If Joe Schmo told the same jokes they'd fall flat. We're laughing more at the character than what he's actually saying. I think that's the case with most good comedians.
I swear I was just watching DC Animated Shorts "Constantine: House of Mysteries", this joke was in the movie, THEN this video appear in my recommendation list!
It's not just that it's the opposite of how we think of aristocrats but that aristocrats have a veneer of respectability and in private are depraved and do what they want...or at least that's my understanding of it.
The punchline was originally the name of the act being "the Aristocrats" ...in modern times the punchline is the delivery and absurd raunchiness of the act itself. If delivered correctly the audience will already be laughing their asses off before the joke ends.
This was inside joke among comedians who soul try to outdo one another in private but Gilbert took it to a whole new level in public. He had been a basically clean comedian until the politically correct forces attacked him for hurting people’s feelings. He lost his Aflac contract because of it. So he doubled down and anyone with a sense of humor doubled over.
I looked into the history of the joke and the whole point is to ad-lib the whole "act" and to just be as vulgar and offensive as possible just for the sake of vulgarity
Normal person: Tells an offensive joke which nobody finds funny, and has no choice other than to get off the stage. Gilbert Gottfried: Tells an offensive joke which nobody finds funny, then tells a different offensive joke which wins back the audience.
He left out a very important part of this legendary joke. He forgot about the part where they all start sliding around on the blood and feces and sing: "We Are Family".
the punchline is the irony in the raunchiness. "aristocrat" means being part of an aristocracy, which is super high middle class. a real aristocrat would shrivel up and die after hearing this joke. it's because an aristocrat would never do any of those things
Does anyone know how to get in contact with that "Aristocrat Family"..? And does anyone know if they're open to adopt a new son to join and become a part of their family? Just asking for a friend ofc.. 😇🥰😍🤤🥳😎🥵😈😁🤫🤐😏
I'm even scared to type this joke on here and he goes all out and even asks if he needs to repeat anything 😂😂😂 Good grief Gilbert we miss you and need laughs like never before today
linktr.ee/witibiti
It’s not about the joke
it’s about the commitment to the joke
Gilbert always commits
That’s why we loved him 💕😢
Just like Norm McDonald
@@Shinkus My two favorite comedians. Both died way too young. RIP to those two legends. I don't think I'll ever laugh at anything as much as I did when listening to those two.
Actually it should be about the joke. If I commit to pissing in your face, it’s still pissing in your face. I don’t get to ask you to appreciate my “commitment”. There has to actually be a joke behind it. But what do you expect from a guy who’s entire career is based on screaming. And what do you expect from people who think screaming is entertaining.
@@commontater1785 Weird, it's almost like comedy is subjective, who knew?
Someone should animate the parrot from Alladin doing this joke, see how fast Disney's lawyers arrive.
Several people have already done that.
It's right up Disney's perverted alley
th-cam.com/video/ph7yWI_SuHE/w-d-xo.html
If Disney is too much heat maybe animate that duck from the commercials. The punchline can be "AFLAC!!!" instead of the aristocrats.
Someone did that about 10 years ago. I remember watching it on here
The lead in to this (which isn't in the video) really makes it. Gilbert had made an off colour joke about 9/11 and slightly lost the crowd and just launched into this. Basically doubling down on bad taste and killed it.
Not only was it a 9/11 joke, but this roast took place less than a month after 9/11.
@@LiberalSquared goddamn
I lived through 911 in New York City; it was a good joke lol
@@LiberalSquared Not even less than a month, but literally the day after. The balls on that man.
@@SkaalKesh Is this the 9/11 version of the Aristocrats, trying to one-up the story? It happened on 9/29/01. Stop making shit up.
I feel like this is the kind of joke only a man like Gilbert Gottfried could do, he's got the voice and that sheer volume of confidence that no other comedian could ever dream of having
There's a documentary about this joke called the aristocrats. It's an in joke comedians tell each other.
"I hate to end this on a really sentimental note..."
Genius honestly
"You want me to start at the beginning?" That gets me everytime!😅😅😅😅
no wonder he had no qualms when it came to reading the stupid shit people wrote for him on Cameo, he was the chosen one
I love as Rob Schneider gets down on the floor with the laugh because of this messed up joke 🤣
He wasn't doubled over laughing, he was bowing and showing respect to someone actually talented.
"They might have to clean this up for TV" Lmfao xD
I thought this was the punchline at first, But. It. kept. Going.
This man went from losing the crowd with a 9/11 joke (days after it happened) to completely killing in a matter of seconds. Gilbert was incredible.
The man was fearless. No one else could have pulled this off.
Neither did he
every stand up has done this joke at some point, at least until recent years. every standup has their own version of it, and take great pleasure in telling it to each other.
Penn & Teller made an entire documentary about the joke...
but yes, the definitive version is Gilberts.
@@DrinkWater713 I have absolutely no idea why this is supposed to be funny or entertaining in any way. It doesn't take courage or insight to spew profanity.
@@commontater1785 100% agree
@@commontater1785 You don't think it takes courage to go up on stage and tell a joke like that?
When asked to say Grace over the holiday meal - start the prayer by saying "A talent agent is sitting in his office..." They will never bother you with that task again.
With the punchline as whatever religion you are being asked to pray about.
What's you act called?
The Jehovah's Witnesses.
Guaranteed histarics if the whole family is involved in that religion.
For you not them.
If I remember correctly this was like September 30 or early October 2001 first week of October 2001 in that time frame. We needed a laugh really bad. And Gilbert delivered
Gilbert delivered a 9/11 joke just before this one and the audience groaned. This joke was meant to 'make up' for it.
Some have said he was the first person ever to make a 9/11 joke on a public stage.
@@anthonysoprano6087 he talked about it on the Drinkin Bros podcast. He WAS the first person to make a 9/11 joke. Great episode
@@Phyrre56the Friar’s Roast is mostly made up of comedians. They just didn’t like it.
The joke goes back to the days of vaudville. It's generally shared among other comedians and it's sort of a shaggy dog story where the idea is to be as filthy as you can be with the setup. Several comedians do the joke, each in their own way.
But i still don't get it.
I understand weird humor, but this ain't even humor anymore.
@@captainobvious8037 it's just so absurd and he goes 100 into it.
The setup is a big part of it, but the punchline is also a legit joke. A person might think we would look up to "elites" in our society, and want to be like them, and have what they have.
Calling the act "The Aristocrats" is a way of saying "our elites are garbage, we shouldn't want to be like them, we should be disgusted by them." It says "I don't believe CNN, I don't believe MSBNC, I don't think celebrities are interesting, I don't think our government is run by great people who are more talented than me."
@@captainobvious8037 th-cam.com/video/lCp4x09hoP4/w-d-xo.html This might explain it lol
The movie about the joke is mint😁
Watch the mimes version 🤣🤣
I wish we saw the joke that came right before this too. Seeing them together makes it so much funnier.
Check out his reading of ,"50 Shades of Gray". I nearly died laughing
“HOLY FUCK IS THIS WRONG!!
But holy hell, is it EROTIC~”
@@PChamileon97 NO FISTING YOU SAY?
Fuck thanks for bringing that back into my life.
That got me in trouble back in high school, I was playing that video with my buddies inside the radio sound booth and the teacher could hear it.
Then maybe it's about time Aladdin the animated Series is released onto complete DVD collection just like the original The Proud Family Series to honour the memories of Gilbert Gottfried who was the voice of Iago.
I seriously question why that wasn't released decades ago. It was a popular series.
And more importantly, so TH-cam can have more priceless X-rated Iago edits. 😆
@@beauwalker9820 Well... in the aftermath of 9/11 and the political climate follieing it, why do you *think* Disney shied away from "Aladdin"?
This shit is so funny, I'm so sad that Gilbert Gottfried is gone. At least we have some A+ comedy.
0:31 Gilbert chuckling is hilarious
This is a very, very old joke, and the punchline is essentially meaningless to a modern audience. But there are two possible interpretations that could indicate what made it funny back in the day. (A) In the context of the world of the early 1900's, Aristocrats were understood to to be gentile, I.E. above anything crass, crude or "low". To get a faint echo of how this worked, try to imagine the current queen of England, in real life, farting loudly and then waving her hands about and shouting "better open a window gang, that was a ripe one!" with a horse-laugh. This would be shockingly incongruous, even today. Our firmly held expectations of that persons behaviour would be completely confounded. , and therefore we might well find it funny. Just as it confounded the expectations of an audience in 1910 that these depraved and salacious "performers" would be labelled aristocrats. Possible explanation (B) is almost a mirror image of -A-, it suggests that the gentry (aristocrats) were known to be libertines who enjoyed pleasures and lifestyles that the great masses could only dream about. By and large these pleasures being drinking, gambling, work-free existence, an endless round of entertainments, perhaps "taking advantage" of low-born farm girls or trollopes. In this context, the "performance" of the vaudevillians is such a ridiculously depraved exaggeration of these kinds of things, that it becomes a rather shocking lampoon and commentary on the aristocracy when the groups name is revealed.
phenomenal analysis my friend. I have many more gilbert videos if you are interested in analyzing more!
I thought it was because royals were known for inc*st? Like to keep their bloodline 'pure'/untouched by commoners.
Spot on. Also The Fatty Arbuckle incident happened back then ,too. He would be in explanation (B).
If you need a history degree to get the joke it's not a good joke.
I interpreted it as the latter personally.
One of the best renditions of this joke ever...
I can't imagine the bad ones then...
It's actually pretty tame compared to most. Bob Saget's was better.
Stanhopes version is off the rails.
@@bustercherry8734 Doug Walker's is pretty good too.
Absolute greatness
Gilbert Gottfried literally invented Barney bunch with this joke
RIP GILBERT
And this is the way-short version…
That really threw me off I was waiting for the 9/11 part.
For marketing sake the family had to change their name to The Cool Aristocrats. You know, to appeal to a younger audience.
Then they changed it again to The Chill Hipsters.
man i wish there was a continuous uncut version of this somewhere without the commentary
Sorry. I could not find it :(
There's a whole movie about this joke called The Aristocrats.
One of the finest ‘Arostocrats’ I’ve heard.
RIP Gilbert Gottfried
One of the ironies about being a celeb who has faded from the spotlight - you suddenly get way more attention after you die.
... what spotlight... your attention span? Gilbert was doing plenty of gigs before his untimely demise. Maybe you should pay a little more attention.
Super sad but true. At least for me since I NEVER used to watch his stuff until quite literally right after I heard about his death. I feel really guilty about it but at the same time I’m glad I eventually got to watch his comedy stuff because he was super funny. Rip to Gilbert Gottfried ♥️
@@chrislevack405 Nobody thought about this guy until his death. End of story. Btw, the joke sucked.
@@goodbadbill You're guaranteed a spot in this years edition of the guiness book of fucking retards.
his own jokes killed him, and probably a lot of the audience too.
he went way too far way too often, but was unafraid of and unapologetic to any backlash he received from the audiences he entertained.
in some ways, he can be immortalized as the arch-nemesis of the sterile, toxic woke culture we're now living in and suffering from. he basically spat in it's eye until he was dehydrated.
“They may have to clean this up for tv”
I didn't even get the joke but this was fucking hilarious.
The joke is the aristocrats.
You make the joke (about this family) as dirty as possible and end it with "the aristocrats".
@@evictioncarpentry2628 Yeah, I got that much, but is the Aristocrats a specific group he's making fun of or is it just aristocrats in general? Either way, what does incest have to do with them?
@@aronb6746 "The Aristocrats" is just a way to finish the joke, like taking a bow, it's not the joke per se nor does it have much relevance to the joke. The joke is how incredibly grotesque and taboo you can make the scenario.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Aristocrats
@@KKmanmi No, the joke is that elitists or "aristocrats" are fked up corrupt, disgusting, immoral, degenerate, grotesque human beings who live in their own world far removed from normal society and they actually do this sort of thing. Ever heard of a dubai porta potty? Look it up.
The joke says the most effed up crap imaginable just to illustrate how disgusting elitists and governments are.
My mom always liked the parrot. She definitely would not have approved of this.
Probably one of the most sacred moments of the human kind era.
R I P comedy legend ❤
I almost thought I was gonna die laughing at this
If you can get your hands on every Comedy Central Roast that Gilbert is in, you will be forever happy!!
🙏🙏🥰🥰😂😂
Not sure about rewinding the video .... was that needed ?
He loved em, he hated em, he blew his brains out!
If you’ve never heard the joke, you won’t get the joke.
If you don’t get the joke, the joke is on you.
If you are familiar with the joke, you get the joke.
It really is a joke that belongs to pro comedians but anyone familiar with its history can appreciate it.
The joke is that rich people are inbred and stupid. And it is so true.
@@riotpb10no. That’s not the joke. Not even close.
Its a good incest joke
I googled it, and the concensus seems to be that its just an outlandish very taboo joke. Apparently theres also an element of it being a hard joke to do properly, but past that i dont see how your comment, which really seems to make it out to be a deep thing, actually applies. The joke dosent have any hidden meaning at all, it is what it is on the surface, gross and taboo
@@alpha_9997 The setup is the punchline and the actual punchline is irrelevant, along with the entirety of the details of the story.
So for future context on this for those who don't remember or weren't around when this happened, this happened extremely close to 9/11. The entire city was still recovering from it, and they barely got this show together. The comedians all knew that it might have been a rough night, and at some points it was. Even Gilbert was having issues getting a laugh, so he ended up just leaning into this joke so hard he fell in a hole. And it changed the entire mood of the night. For a lot of people there, it may have been one of the most needed laugh of their lives.
Well that joke went in a total different direction than I thought! But that was a riot!
who's the nobend in the background doing commentary?
Rob Schneider really just had to make this about him, didn’t he?
He told that joke the best.
"I guess I gotta let them have it?"
No frame of reference for the punchline, and I'm sure it had some meaning, but the delivery was on point.
So after some research: the joke is really old, (like 1920s old) and the aristocracy was the high society people, who could do whatever they wanted because they had money and power. So the common family in the joke, do the depraved stuff and tell the agent we are basically mimicking the Aristocrats.
Given that context, he shoulda said "The Hefners"!, just to bring the joke into the 2000s. I still loved it.
It’s a joke that comedians will tell each other to make the most vulgar story possible. There isn’t really a punch line, it’s always :someone goes to the talent agent, horrible/horrific performance art/pornographic imagery and finishes by saying they are the Aristocrats. They is a whole documentary on it (called the Aristocrats) where they interview comedians and some tell there version. It’s very good, this seems to be editing from the movie
Some comedians end with the punchline "The Sophisticates!"
The Kardashians!
@@jonathantraylor297 🤣
It's an inside joke for comedians, seeing how far they can take it. But seriously, people have to look up what an aristocrat is/was??
I saw this about a 10 years ago performed by some other guy. It's like Jimmy Carr's little brother tried to make a joke only saying gross stuff
Those Arkansas talent shows never failed to turn up a gem in the rough ;)
I BEEN LOOKING FOR THIS CLIP FOR YEARS! He said this joke because he upset a lot of people with a 9-11 joke when it had just happen like only 3 weeks ago back in 2001. He was really confused why the crowd legit was acting that way. One yelled out "TOO SOON!" So... he decided he need to win the crowd back over with that joke. Not even joking look it up.
Most comedians know this old joke. Most never do it. It's very hard to get it right, and timing is everything for this one. Almost all the comics on the stage and in the audience knew this old joke and were dying as Gilbert launched into it.
I will NEVER give Aflac my business. RIP Gil.
Movie is “The Aristocrats”, for those curious.
Brandon Rogers does an excellent, somewhat darker version in a Denny's...
The joke itself isn't funny at all. But Gottfried's delivery (and just the fact that its Gilbert Gottfried); that one guy losing it; the quiet commentator observing this like a golf game; and the fact that this was how he saved himself after his failed 9/11 joke, are what makes this a gem.
That one guy? Rob Schneider?
The commentator is also fkn Rob Schneider... jesus christ
Also the joke is hilarious, you're just clearly a dipshit
He wasn't trying to save himself, he was saying oh, you found that one offensive? Buckle up!
@@benjaminisaac9184 Still, the fact that this *is* how he saved his act, whether he was trying to or not, is hilarious.
Gilbert Gottfried's passion, voice and delivery were what made him great (along with his absolute fearlessness about anyone disliking what he had to say); his actual comedic ability and attempts at jokes were limited, at best.
@@hobomike6935 It was the persona he created, his stage character, that was really funny. If Joe Schmo told the same jokes they'd fall flat. We're laughing more at the character than what he's actually saying. I think that's the case with most good comedians.
I’m just imagining Yago’s voice haha
iago*
No matter who tells this joke it always sucks.
You just don't get it
Oh, it's a suckfest :)
The MAN
One of those had to be there situations.
I swear I was just watching DC Animated Shorts "Constantine: House of Mysteries", this joke was in the movie, THEN this video appear in my recommendation list!
O great 😀
If this man were alive in the 1940s he would have done a joke about Pearl Harbor before Christmas 1941. Absolutely fearless.
i only knew that this was right after an extremely "too-soon" 9/11 joke
and i honestly expected him to swerve back into 9/11 at the end
I don’t get the punchline…. Please explain!
It's not just that it's the opposite of how we think of aristocrats but that aristocrats have a veneer of respectability and in private are depraved and do what they want...or at least that's my understanding of it.
The punchline was originally the name of the act being "the Aristocrats" ...in modern times the punchline is the delivery and absurd raunchiness of the act itself. If delivered correctly the audience will already be laughing their asses off before the joke ends.
This was inside joke among comedians who soul try to outdo one another in private but Gilbert took it to a whole new level in public. He had been a basically clean comedian until the politically correct forces attacked him for hurting people’s feelings. He lost his Aflac contract because of it. So he doubled down and anyone with a sense of humor doubled over.
Fun fact, after this joke, 9/11 was forgotten about
I missed part of the joke. Can you start it over again? ^.-
This was very funny when it came out but it aged terribly. Shock humor is one of those types that just got played out.
Yeah, the Aristocrats joke was only around for literally a century..
I looked into the history of the joke and the whole point is to ad-lib the whole "act" and to just be as vulgar and offensive as possible just for the sake of vulgarity
Ok, I'll admit it! I never got the joke nor Gottfried....See you are not the only one!!
This is the same man who voices digit on Cyberchase, talking about people's assholes
Normal person: Tells an offensive joke which nobody finds funny, and has no choice other than to get off the stage.
Gilbert Gottfried: Tells an offensive joke which nobody finds funny, then tells a different offensive joke which wins back the audience.
I don't undersand... what part of that fits the definition of a joke?
There's a whole documentary about this joke.
Yes there is. I shortened it the best I could, the commentary distracts from the joke.
A finger is fathering as sun hassle
Why does he ALWAYS look like he is in pain and can't breathe.
I want pics.
Far better without the inserted comments
"HIYA SCHMUCKS!!!"
Now, THAT'S how you tell a joke!!
That might be the greatest joke of all time lol
He left out a very important part of this legendary joke. He forgot about the part where they all start sliding around on the blood and feces and sing: "We Are Family".
The voiceover ruins it.
Sorry. I really tried to cut it out as much as I could and find a version that didn’t have it.
Okay.
Is there a punchline or is that it?
Yes
the punchline is the irony in the raunchiness. "aristocrat" means being part of an aristocracy, which is super high middle class. a real aristocrat would shrivel up and die after hearing this joke. it's because an aristocrat would never do any of those things
could have said, the Weinsteins and that would have dropped show on its face laughing. Because, that's how Harvey worked.
Wtf you spoil the punchline in the title? 🤔🙄😭
Sounds like a good time
I don't get it.
I don’t get it
Hired?
vi acom is still holding out on this? who's gonna shill out the $15,000 to use this bit?
Does anyone know how to get in contact with that "Aristocrat Family"..? And does anyone know if they're open to adopt a new son to join and become a part of their family? Just asking for a friend ofc.. 😇🥰😍🤤🥳😎🥵😈😁🤫🤐😏
BOB SAGET WAS THE ONE THAT MADE THIS POPULAR AND WELL KNOWN FIRST YEA THE GUY FROM FULL HOUSE
RIP
BOB
AND
GILBERT
I'm even scared to type this joke on here and he goes all out and even asks if he needs to repeat anything 😂😂😂
Good grief Gilbert we miss you and need laughs like never before today
Aristocrat's ...I don't get it
Can't the narrator keep quiet. He ruined the joke.
I understand. I tried to cut around it, but copyright kills dreams here 😭
2024...this is considered a " fail". Fuck political correctness. True comedy.
This sounds like Salò.
Of course Hefner wasn't laughing. He had probably done everything the joke was talking about before.
Sick, twisted fuq