Dad jokes are objectively awful, but also good.
They’re called dad jokes – but you don’t have to be a father to recognise the type of gags that fall under that category.
We’ve made no secret of our love of dad jokes in the past. When you reach a certain age, you bored trying to make people laugh at your jokes, opting for the vastly superior groan of annoyance or – better yet – silent disapproval.
Making your own dad joke is easy, but crafting the perfect one is difficult. Like building some Ikea shelves without the instructions or raising a son who can express their feelings in a healthy way and rejects all aspects of toxic masculinity.
Usually, they contain a line so obvious that most people don’t bother telling them and if they elicit a laugh, it’s normally a very brief one before angry, annoyed looks are cast in your direction.
Twitter user @enterjeshikari posted a screengrab of a message sent to her by her father on Tuesday and it’s been shared thousands of times since.
It grew so popular that Jess has ended up trending in London, Liverpool, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Manchester and Sheffield.
All for this…
my dad has just taken dad jokes to a whole new level pic.twitter.com/S7pklb4EhX
— jess🌱 (@jess_huntx) July 26, 2016
And if there’s one thing the internet loves more than a dad bod, it’s a dad joke..
https://twitter.com/NathanJEllerton/status/757879318760529920
https://twitter.com/MrSewell_/status/757886840166813696
He's raisin the bar on dad jokes
— Richard P. Steeves (@c_bass69) July 27, 2016
https://twitter.com/RossO_Brien/status/758364475053531136
Could you do better?
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