How to Find Laughter Anywhere | Chris Duffy | TED

80,871 views ・ 2024-09-11

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:03
My favorite part about working in an elementary school
0
3917
2586
00:06
is that I could never predict what was going to happen next.
1
6503
2961
00:09
Every day was a new, incredible day.
2
9506
1752
00:11
There was never a boring moment.
3
11258
2127
00:13
Sometimes, you think that you're handing out a worksheet
4
13426
2962
00:16
just reviewing the names of shapes.
5
16388
2586
00:18
But then instead of getting back hexagon and octagon,
6
18974
4713
00:23
you get back this.
7
23728
1168
00:24
["Amy" "Gabriella"]
8
24938
1168
00:26
(Laughter)
9
26147
2253
00:28
And I think we can agree that is just correct.
10
28441
3003
00:31
(Laughter)
11
31486
1001
00:32
That’s right, that is Gabriella.
12
32487
1960
00:34
(Laughter)
13
34447
2628
00:37
Or, another time I was teaching a class
14
37117
4004
00:41
on human biology to my fifth-grade students
15
41162
2962
00:44
when one of them afterwards handed in this anonymous question card.
16
44165
3587
00:47
[What are balls for.]
17
47794
1668
00:49
(Laughter)
18
49504
2419
00:51
And you know what really gets me about this, what kills me,
19
51923
2836
00:54
is we had spent so long studying punctuation.
20
54759
3754
00:58
And he still used a period instead of a question mark.
21
58555
2753
01:01
“What are balls for.” Period.
22
61349
1669
01:03
(Laughter)
23
63059
2294
01:05
At the same time that I was teaching elementary school students,
24
65979
3003
01:09
I was also teaching adults improv comedy at a local theater on the weekends.
25
69024
3878
01:12
This was a group of retired folks,
26
72944
2044
01:14
graduate students and semi-successful business people
27
74988
3170
01:18
who were paying money to spend their Saturday mornings
28
78158
2836
01:21
in an unventilated basement with me.
29
81036
2794
01:23
And most of the exercises that we were doing together
30
83872
2586
01:26
were to get them to let go of the self-critical part of their brain,
31
86458
3420
01:29
to release the idea that there was a "right" answer to find,
32
89919
3504
01:33
and to instead be more comfortable with their honest, creative,
33
93465
3670
01:37
idiosyncratic thoughts.
34
97135
1710
01:39
Now any elementary school teacher can tell you
35
99220
2586
01:41
that getting kids to share their honest, unexpected thoughts,
36
101806
3629
01:45
that's not something you have to cultivate.
37
105477
2002
01:47
They will do that whether you want them to or not.
38
107520
2795
01:50
I mean, here are some real questions that kids asked me out of the blue
39
110315
3795
01:54
with no context,
40
114110
1585
01:55
during what was supposed to be a silent work time.
41
115737
2502
01:58
(Laughter)
42
118239
1168
02:00
"Is it possible to make myself live longer so that I can see the Sun explode?"
43
120325
4379
02:04
(Laughter)
44
124746
1126
02:06
"Are pigs actually prejudiced against women,
45
126873
2503
02:09
or is that just an expression?"
46
129417
1794
02:11
(Laughter)
47
131211
5297
02:17
"If your brother isn't married yet,
48
137008
2544
02:19
why doesn't he just marry your mom?"
49
139594
2002
02:21
(Laughter)
50
141596
1168
02:22
And actually, that brings up a really important point,
51
142806
2544
02:25
which is that kids' ideas are not always good.
52
145392
2168
02:27
Sometimes they're very bad.
53
147560
1335
02:28
I'm personally very grateful that my mom and my brother are not married.
54
148895
3545
02:32
(Laughter)
55
152482
1126
02:34
There's some research that suggests that for many of us,
56
154025
2711
02:36
fifth grade is close to the peak of this kind of wildly free,
57
156778
2878
02:39
uninhibited, creative thinking.
58
159656
1501
02:41
But that does not have to be the case.
59
161199
1835
02:43
In my experience, the difference between people with an amazing sense of humor
60
163034
3671
02:46
and those without is often just whether they are willing to accept
61
166746
3754
02:50
and notice their honest reactions,
62
170500
2252
02:52
or whether they try their hardest to fit them into a box.
63
172794
2920
02:55
And that can shift over time.
64
175714
1418
02:57
I saw that shift with my adult improv students.
65
177132
2252
02:59
At first, when we would do an exercise
66
179426
2127
03:01
where they were asked to name seven things in a given category
67
181594
2920
03:04
as quickly and creatively as possible,
68
184514
2085
03:06
many of them would get stuck.
69
186641
1668
03:08
One guy, Rick, a corporate tax lawyer,
70
188351
2378
03:10
answered the prompt,
71
190770
1293
03:12
"Seven weird types of shoes"
72
192063
1835
03:13
by saying, "Brown shoes, white shoes,
73
193898
4630
03:18
black shoes, gray shoes."
74
198528
3086
03:21
I'm not going to name all the shoes,
75
201656
1752
03:23
it was all a lot of boring shoes, you get it.
76
203408
2127
03:25
But then, after we practiced celebrating our more bizarre thoughts
77
205535
3128
03:28
instead of repressing them,
78
208705
2169
03:30
Rick eventually came up with a list a list that included things like,
79
210874
3253
03:34
"Shoes covered in mud, shoes covered in gold,
80
214127
2669
03:36
shoes covered in the blood of my enemies.”
81
216838
2210
03:39
Which is like, that’s a lot, Rick,
82
219090
1627
03:40
actually, that's a lot, it's really a lot.
83
220759
2585
03:44
But it's also definitely more interesting.
84
224053
2670
03:46
And I think that's the point.
85
226765
1459
03:48
When we turn off our self-judgment
86
228266
1710
03:49
and we just notice the things that stand out to us,
87
229976
2586
03:52
or that we think,
88
232562
1168
03:53
we can surprise ourselves in ways that are hilarious and delightful.
89
233772
3670
03:57
Every comedian that I know has a notebook or some sort of document
90
237484
3753
04:01
where they keep track of all the little odd things
91
241279
2336
04:03
that they notice or think throughout the day.
92
243656
2128
04:05
And what you find, when you start keeping track,
93
245784
2252
04:08
is that there is no shortage of material out there.
94
248036
2419
04:10
There [is] so much to laugh at.
95
250455
1710
04:12
And if you have a little bit of courage to allow yourself to be laughed at
96
252165
4004
04:16
and to laugh at yourself,
97
256211
1793
04:18
you can make discoveries
98
258004
1168
04:19
that you never would have otherwise, right?
99
259214
2002
04:21
If you want to know what balls are for, sometimes you've got to ask.
100
261257
3587
04:24
I have found that you can find laughter in even the driest places
101
264844
3671
04:28
if you bring some of that mischievous fifth-grade energy
102
268515
3586
04:32
to the instructions and to what you're "supposed" to be doing, right?
103
272101
3337
04:35
It doesn't have to be geometry class.
104
275438
1835
04:37
It can be an opportunity for you
105
277273
1877
04:39
to hang out with your good friend Gabriella.
106
279150
2169
04:41
Now I have had the most fun when I applied these lessons
107
281861
3879
04:45
that I got from my fifth graders to self-serious adult spaces.
108
285782
3587
04:49
To places where I maybe feel intimidated or like I don't necessarily belong.
109
289410
4296
04:53
So, for example, for me personally, LinkedIn.
110
293748
3670
04:57
Terrifying.
111
297460
1418
04:58
I've never had a professional resume,
112
298920
1793
05:00
I've never been comfortable with business networking,
113
300755
2920
05:03
but I've also always been kind of fascinated by LinkedIn.
114
303675
2711
05:06
Like, they let you make a profile,
115
306386
1668
05:08
and they don't verify that you work at the place you say you work.
116
308096
3295
05:11
So I decided I was going to test this out and have some fun.
117
311432
3003
05:14
I made a profile on LinkedIn
118
314477
1877
05:16
where I said that I was the CEO of LinkedIn.
119
316396
2836
05:19
(Laughter)
120
319274
2419
05:21
And I didn't think they would even let me do that.
121
321734
2419
05:24
But not only did they, after I made the profile,
122
324195
3045
05:27
one of the most incredible things
123
327282
1626
05:28
that has ever happened in my entire life happened.
124
328908
2962
05:31
Which is that LinkedIn sent this email to everyone in my contact list.
125
331870
4671
05:37
They sent that email.
126
337000
1209
05:38
(Laughter)
127
338251
1376
05:39
"Congratulate Chris on the new job.
128
339627
2253
05:41
Chris Duffy is now CEO of LinkedIn."
129
341921
2670
05:44
(Laughter)
130
344591
1209
05:45
That's a better joke than anything I could ever write in my entire life.
131
345842
3462
05:49
(Laughter)
132
349345
3379
05:53
I was the CEO of LinkedIn on LinkedIn for one year.
133
353266
5005
05:58
(Laughter)
134
358271
3211
06:01
And at that one-year mark,
135
361482
1877
06:03
LinkedIn sent yet another email to everyone in my contact list
136
363401
4171
06:07
asking them to congratulate me on my work anniversary.
137
367572
3003
06:10
(Laughter)
138
370575
1835
06:12
And at that point,
139
372452
1460
06:13
I received a message from a woman named Faith
140
373912
2127
06:16
who worked on LinkedIn's Trust and Security team.
141
376080
2586
06:18
(Laughter)
142
378666
1669
06:20
She said my account was being locked due to concerns about its inaccuracy.
143
380376
4463
06:25
So I sent her back a photo of my license,
144
385798
2795
06:28
front and back,
145
388635
1334
06:30
to prove that my name was, in fact, Chris Duffy.
146
390011
2336
06:32
(Laughter)
147
392388
1001
06:33
Faith responded.
148
393431
1627
06:35
"The thing that we are concerned about is not that your name is not Chris Duffy.
149
395058
4045
06:39
It's that you are claiming to be the CEO of LinkedIn."
150
399145
3420
06:42
So I responded,
151
402607
1460
06:44
"Faith, you are taking a pretty disrespectful tone
152
404067
2961
06:47
for someone who works for me."
153
407028
1668
06:48
(Laughter)
154
408696
5714
06:58
10 seconds later, she permanently deactivated my account.
155
418581
3629
07:02
(Laughter)
156
422251
3379
07:05
It was a short but glorious stint, running my own personal social network.
157
425672
4045
07:09
(Laughter)
158
429759
1376
07:11
And now, what am I up to these days?
159
431177
2211
07:13
I'm so glad you asked.
160
433429
1544
07:15
I'm more than just a fifth-grade graduate.
161
435014
2211
07:17
I'm actually,
162
437225
1710
07:18
I'm the founder and owner of TED.
163
438935
2169
07:21
(Laughter)
164
441104
2961
07:24
Congratulate me, you know you want to.
165
444107
2335
07:26
Thanks for coming to my conference.
166
446484
1710
07:28
(Applause and cheers)
167
448194
5881
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7