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Bell, a tall, bubbly woman with a sharp wit, fortunately was not violently attacked during her research, despite the quality of the joke she chose from among thousands of bad jokes available on-line. She recruited her students -- "my minions" -- to slip the joke into normal conversations and then record the results. "I told them, 'Just go out and tell bad jokes, be a hero in the field,'" Bell said. The chimney joke made it into 207 conversations. An astonishing 44 percent of the reactions were classified as "impolite," intended to deeply embarrass the joke teller. The toughest responses came from people who knew the joke teller well, she found. "The younger you are and the closer you are in age to your failed humorist, the more likely you are to attack," Bell said. And, no surprise, children were especially hostile to failed humor by their parents. Thankfully, failed humor is relatively rare in the U.S., where laughter is prized, said Bell, an Oregon native. But she had her own painful exposure to failed humor when she lived in France, and found that many of her witticisms did not translate well into her second language. "I may have been Nancy funny, but I was not French-speaking-Nancy funny," she said. ___ On the Web: Bad jokes: http://www.allbadjokes.com/
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