Okay, it looks to me like the best approach to this is to take things a bit out of order.
jonrog1 said:
. You went from zero to snarky in 6 flat there, mate.
[...snip...]
And stop *shrug*-ging. It's passive aggressive.
Well, to start with, where I come from "*shrug*" is not passive aggressive. It's a variant of "IMHO". Since when is that passive aggressive?
Yes, I went froom zero to snarky in 6 flat. And I already publicly announced that I realize that wasn't a good thing to do, and asked for pardon. Continuing to bring it up doesn't really count as pardon. What more do you want?
I think he was making the point that wider general circles other than just sci-fi would get the joke. He may have mispoke when he said "general sci-fi circles" but as that's a subset of "general circles", I don't think his statement's off.
If he misspoke, I'm perfectly happy to drop the whole thing.
However, I just don't agree with either your assessment, or Mark's. But, I don't see as our chewing it over relentlessly is gonna get us anywhere.
My proposition was that you don't have to know anything about science to get the joke.
And, as you'll note, I already ceeded some time ago that this may be the case. I noted that it really depends upon context, how it was presented, and that I didn't have that information.
When I brought up the question of jargon-dependance, I saw a lot more of folks defending it on the basis of knowing the jargon, rather than on it being funny without. Small sample, of course.
Been writing comedy 12 damn years. Nothing a decade of telling jokes in bars'll teach you better than to write a jargon joke. The joke actually FAILS if it's only a joke sci-fi guys would get.
I would have figured that there's one thing a decade of telling jokes in bars will teach you better - that they aren't all gems.
The reviewers failed to get it, and were dubbed "humorless". Folks are sometimes a bit antagonistic towards less-than-complementary critics or reviews, and the comment sounded rather... dismissive ("No, it can't be my joke, it must be that they're humorless"). My original intent was to see if it was the antagonism talking or not.