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- Ayn RANAs mentioned in the live action TV section, Jon Stewart of The Daily Show is a snarker, but it's not just on The Daily Show either; his snarkiness is a major staple of his public persona elsewhere as well. For example, there's this "Crossfire" interview.
Carlson: I want to contrast our questions with some questions you asked John Kerry. |
- Stephen Colbert as well.
- The fictional Stephen Colbert is an example, but the Real Life Stephen Colbert is an aversion—he's quick to smile and has a warm personality in contrast with his on-camera persona. Sometimes he has to struggle to keep his straight face on the show.
- Well, character!Stephen is also not actually being snarky (except when he's supposed to sound idiotic) — his character is so extreme all his beliefs sound like sarcasm. The disembodied mind of The Word, on the other hand...
- One must remember the man that Colbert parodies: Bill O'Reilly, the most notorious Deadpan Snarker on the news airwaves.
- To wit: When Jon Stewart took him out of context and snarked about how Bill is "looking out for a poor, dwindling minority", implying that that rich were who O'Reilly was talking about, O'Reilly turned it into an Insult Backfire with the following:
- Stephen Colbert as well.
Stewart: I shouldn't poke fun. Bill's just standing up for a shrinking, exploited minority. |
- Keith Olbermann going back to his days at ESPN: " is on the disabled list with a groin pull. His own we hope."
- ESPN days nothing, even when talking about politics (or rivalries with other commentary shows) he can be pretty snarky.
Keith: As an aside, Bill, who's this "we" you always talk about? You and Ann Coulter? You and your multiple personalities? |
- Don Rickles. It was even in his nickname, "Mr. Warmth."
- Winston Churchill
Lady Astor: If you were my husband, I'd poison your tea. |
- And
Bessie Braddock: You, sir, are drunk. |
- And
Minor Commons functionary, seeing octogenarian Churchill shuffling through the lobby: They say he's dotty, you know. |
- Simon Cowell
- Terry Wogan—Irish commentor on British Eurovision, although he is actually Irish. He was replaced by another Munster man, Graham Norton, and both of them refered to the British entry as the first person plural.
- Oddly enough (and almost ironically), Spartans in real life, despite being intense Blood Knights and badasses are renowned for their startlingly Deadpan Snarker nature (laconic wit originated from them - Sparta is in the region called Laconia). Examples include King Demaratus's response to someone asking him who the most exemplary Spartan was: "He that is least like you.", and the Spartans' response to both Phillip II and Alexander the Great's threat that if they bring their army into their land and win the war, then it will mean Sparta's destruction. They replied with a one word response: "If." (Subsequently, both Phillip II and Alexander avoided Sparta entirely).
- During the Battle of Thermopylae, the Spartans were told that the Persian arrows would be so thick as to blot out the sun. The Spartan response was: "Then we shall fight in the shade."
- When asked by the Persian army to lay down their weapons, their response was "Molon Labe", Greek for "Come and take them." In fact, dry wit was invented by the Spartans. This would also make it Older Than Feudalism. You already knew most of these.
- After the battle of Cunaxa, King Artaxerxes II of Persia asked the Greeks involved in the battle to surrender their weapons. The response of their Spartan commander Klearchos: "It is not the victors who lay down their arms."
- Xenophon's Anabasis gives us this comment on preparations for festive games at Trapezos:
Spartan mercenary 1: How can we wrestle on ground as rocky and overgrown as this? |
- This is essentially comedian Dylan Moran's entire stage persona, and makes up the majority of his television and film roles.
- On the subject of news coverage when there are shootings in the US:
Dylan Moran: And the news is going "How can this all happen? It's dreadful!" And I think "Well, you all have guns. And they do have a limited number of household applications. Unlike Californian wine, which can be used to clean submarines. |
- General Anthony McAuliffe famously responded to a German request for surrender during the Seige of Bastogne, during the Battle of the Bulge during World War Two, with one word: Nuts.
- Mark Twain. He was Sarcasm Incarnate!
- Oscar Wilde is renowned for his wit, to the point that he could be considered the trope codifier. Upon being called a "bugger" by the Marquess of Queensbury who invented a set of rules for boxing called "The Queensbury Rules", Wilde merely responded that he had no idea what the Queensbury Rules were but that the Oscar Wilde rule was to shoot on sight]].
- After the premier of The Importance of Being Ernest, he gave the following speech. "Ladies and gentlemen, the actors have given us a charming rendition of a delightful play and your appreciation has been most intelligent. I commend you on the great success of your performance which persuades me that you think almost as highly of this play as I myself do."
- This trait tended to get him in trouble during his trial for Gross Indecency, a synonym for homosexuality at the time. When asked if he had a kissed a male waiter he responded "No I did not, he was exceedingly ugly."
- Dorothy Parker
- Fran Lebowitz
- Faina G. Ranevskaya, great Russian actress of Jewish origin. Most favorite snarks of her:
Life is a sky-dive: out of a cunt, into the grave. |
- Canadian Father-of-Our-Country, Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald, lived and breathed this trope.
Well-Dressed Lady: (falls over, hoopskirt flies up) |
- He showed up in the House of Commons hung-over, threw up, and declared that comments made by the Leader of the Opposition had made him ill.
- When caught embezzling money from the Canadian Pacific Railway? "I should never have put it in writing."
- Or the other time he showed up in the House of Commons drunk: "Yes, but the people would still prefer John A. drunk to George Brown sober".
- Bill Maher.
- Former U.S. President Calvin "Silent Cal" Coolidge. During a dinner, a guest (Dorothy Parker—no slouch herself in the snark department—according to some accounts) informed him she had taken a bet that she couldn't get him to say more than two words that whole night. His response? "You lose."
- A conversation turned to Soviet Russia and became quite heated. President Cal, hanging back as usual. His wife, Grace, tried to defuse the situation by asking, "Now, what dressing would everyone prefer on their salad? Italian or Catalina?" Coolidge answered mildly, "I'll take the one that isn't Red."
- His wife was once too sick to join him at church, so when he got back from services, she asked him about the sermon:
Grace: What did the reverend speak about? |
- Ski movie maker Warren Miller is famous for this.
- Jane Austen
- Roger Ebert is well-known for his Genre Savvy snark in his film reviews.
- George Orwell had his dry wit, with saying like "it seems, that in modern political discourse in England, Fascism means 'everything I don't like'", "Sometimes the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious", "Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it" and this particular gem:
"No one I met at this time — doctors, nurses, practicantes, or fellow-patients — failed to assure me that a man who is hit through the neck and survives it is the luckiest creature alive. I could not help thinking that it would be even luckier not to be hit at all." |
- Anthony Bourdain. His snarky, long voiceovers in No Reservations say ALL you need to know.
- Any writer who makes habitual use of the Lemony Narrator, What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome? or Lampshade Hanging tropes. Like Neal Stephenson, Terry Pratchett, Christopher Moore and Neil Gaiman.
- Memoir writers that reflect on dark moments or awkward memories often use this type of language. David Sedaris is a prime example.
- A vast number of political hecklers. Though not nearly as vast a number as those who think they are.
- Politicians too: According to one article on George W. Bush, he was brought up by a famously competitive father and adopted "almost nonstop towel snapping" as a survival mechanism.
- FactCheck.org, when dealing with the craziest of Conspiracy Theorists and most overblown of chain e-mails, indulges in quite a bit of this.
- ESPN's Stuart Scott.
- Similarly, NFL Total Access host (and Scott's former Sports Center cohort) Rich Eisen.
- ESPN has always been a haven for deadpan snarkers, from Charley Steiner to Dan Patrick to (nowadays) Kenny Mayne.
- On the podast side of ESPN, Fantasy Focus host Nate Ravitz and Baseball Today contributor Keith Law are both very good at delivering snark.
- Paul Merton falls here as does Ian Hislop from Have I Got News for You.
Fern Britton: (to Paul, after going on about Madonna adopting a child from Africa) Sorry, am I boring you? |
- Star Trek fans are often startled by the contrast between the innocence of Data and the incredibly deadpan snark of Brent Spiner.
- Current American President Barack Obama.
- "Contrary to popular belief, I was not born in a manger. I was sent in a rocket ship from the planet Krypton, by my father, Jor-El, to save the Earth."
- "So when Brian Williams is asking me about what's a personal thing that you've done [that's green], and I say, you know, 'Well, I planted a bunch of trees.' And he says, 'I'm talking about personal.' What I'm thinking in my head is, 'Well, the truth is, Brian, we can't solve global warming because I fucking changed light bulbs in my house.'"
- His speech at the 2011 White House Correspondents Dinner is 8 minutes of deadpan snarking combined with repeated Take Thats aimed at Donald Trump.
- Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and husband of the British Queen also lives this trope (often in a very racist and politically incorrect way):
- "How do you keep the natives off the booze long enough to get them through the test?" to a driving instructor in Scotland.
- "Everybody was saying we must have more leisure. Now they are complaining they are unemployed." at the time of the recession in 1981.
- "You could do with losing a bit of weight." Said to a 13-year-old boy who wanted to become an astronaut.
- "How can you tell the difference between them?", at a meeting with the US-President Barack Obama when he told him that he had just met with the Chinese and Russian ambassadors.
- Said to a blind woman with a seeing eye dog: "Do you know they’re now producing eating dogs for anorexics?"
- The Queen herself is generally known for her decorum and quiet dignity. Which makes lines like this all the funnier: "The Polish President only knows two English words." Beat. "They are quite interesting words."
- Or:
Shopkeeper: You look awfully like the Queen. |
- Or:
Queen: (visiting a veterinary research institute): What's that? |
- The British establishment practically breathes this trope. After a TV loudmouth called (in jest) for strikers to be shot, Downing Street said: "Executions are not government policy." When Nicolae Ceaucescu demanded a double-bed to be in every single piece of transportation he used for his state visit, a Foreign Office official wrote on a memorandum: "Mr Ceaucescu has thus far failed to specify the exact purpose of the double bed." When his son Nicu demanded a woman, the Foreign Office said: "purpose of woman also unspecified." When the Germans delayed Operation Sea Lion , Winston Churchill said: "We are waiting for the promised invasion. (Beat). So are the fishes."
- Marcus Tullius Cicero. Plutarch lists several of his snarky sayings, such as:
Publius Consta, who wanted to be a lawyer, but was ignorant and stupid, was once summoned by Cicero as witness in a case; and when he kept saying that he knew nothing, "Perhaps," said Cicero, "you think you are being questioned on points of law." |
- Also, from the Caelius trial, where instead of defending Caelius of criminal charges he was accused of he spent most of his defense speech attacking the character and motives of the accuser, Caelius's ex-lover Clodia:
"But now I will handle her with moderation, and proceed no further than my honor and the case itself demand. I have never thought it right to take up arms against a lady, especially against one whose arms are so open to all." |
- Steve Jobs, co-founder and CEO of Apple inc.. Especially since he started replying to the often ignorant or misinformed emails sent by his followers.
- Almost any 'Let's player'.
- Robert Downey, Jr. seems to fit this pretty well. He's been cast in such roles because he does it so well. All the way back to his role as Derek in the 1986 movie, "Back to School". In fact, the scenes with Dangerfield and Downey are like watching a Master and his Protégé.
- Speaking of which, though he was often appeared a bit exaggerated in his snarkiness much of the time, Rodney Dangerfield was still a master at delivering deadpan snark as well. Most just remember the more over the top style because that's what made him famous.
- There's a great cameo for Rodney Dangerfield in an episode of Home Improvement. Dangerfield's character is extremely irritated by Tim's antics and this little exchange occurs:
Rodney: Hey, remind me to into you later... |
- The Beatles, particularly in their early days, were known to be quite snarky and quick-witted in interviews, which came across as a breath of fresh air following a generation of overly earnest, overly polite and slightly dull so-called "rock" musicians. Of the four, John Lennon was probably the snarkiest:
Reporter: Can you sing something for us? |
- Lennon's most famous snark, arguably, from A Hard Day's Night regarding the boys' U.S. tour:
Reporter: How did you find America? |
- Lennon's controversial 'Bigger Than Jesus' quote was really a bit of snark directed toward all the hype surrounding the Beatles; i.e., that the media was making them a bigger story than they really deserved to be. It wasn't taken that way at the time.
- Stephen Hawking is quite the smart-alec for a guy who has to talk through a computer. Inspiring, really.
Interviewer: With all your intense erudition, why do you bother writing pop-science books about the universe, the latest of which is the illustrated version of On the Shoulders of Giants? |
- Reportedly not a joke: he needed money to put his kids through college and decided to write the kind of book that would be sold at airport bookstands - the result was A Brief History of Time. His editor warned him that every equation in a book cuts sales in half, so he limited himself to including just a single equation in a book about the history of the universe. He felt he couldn't possibly avoid "e = mc^2" but worried that he could have sold twice as many books without it. Apparently he solved that problem by just writing more books.
- Alan Rickman could trademark this trope. Proof? Read any of his interviews. Or watch them. He especially has fun with the ones who obviously have no clue why he's there and only know him from Harry Potter.
- Tom Petty has been known to be a deadpan snarker on occasion. When once asked why he decided to tour with Bob Dylan, he said "Money." However, most of the time he seems to be pretty articulate.
- German negiotiator to surrounded British commander of the troop holding the bridge at Arnhem, 1944: "We come to arrange a surrender." Brit officer: "I'm afraid we don't have the facilities to take you all prisoner. Was there anything else?"
- The Swiss make their Guards wear those funny-looking Baroque outfits because they're such Badass [[[Deadpan Snarker|DeadpanSnarkers]]:
Asks the (post-Austrian Anschluss, but pre-World War II) Nazi officer to the Swiss general: "Really, how many Swiss could you resist us with?" |
- When asked about Electronic Arts' stance on the legal actions between Activision and Infinity Ward, Jeff Brown responded, "We don't have the time to comment on the many lawsuits Activision files against its employees and creative partners."
- When Bobby Kotick called out EA for not having a good relationship with their studios, Jeff Brown also sniped back thus: "Kotick’s relationship with studio talent is well-documented in litigation."
- Jeremy Paxman, Britain's most famously belligerent interviewer, lives and breathes this trope. When presenting Newsnight, he once signed off a show with "...and that can be found on our website, along with our editor's pathetic pleas to send us in your bits of old home movie and whatnot so we can turn into the BBC's equivalent of Animals Do the Funniest Things". This is him signing off a straight-laced news show.
- And when it was (temporarily) decided that the business news should be replaced by a weather forecast, he went even further.
- "Here it is, short of the usual folksy nonsense about clouds bubbling up and advice about wearing woolly socks. Eastern places will mainly avoid the rain, except for those that don't; western areas will be cloudy with rain except in those places that don't have rain"
- "And finally, by popular demand, the second Newsnight weather forecast: take an umbrella with you."
- "It's a veritable smorgasbord - rain, thunder, hail, snow, cold, winds."
- "It's April. What do you expect?"
- And when it was (temporarily) decided that the business news should be replaced by a weather forecast, he went even further.
- George S. Patton, in at least one instance. After capturing the German city of Trier, he received a message from Eisenhower telling him to bypass the city as it would take too many men to capture. He responded, "Have taken Trier with two divisions. What do you want me to do? Give it back?"
- Australia. Australian national humor is best described as "horrifying fallacies delivered with a straight face to foreigners."
- Okay, we're not THAT malicious. It's just so much fun messing with people's heads when they pop over with such amusing preconceived notions! And you can make a decent buck. "For twenty bucks, I can let you slide down the side of the Opera House."
- Are you kidding? I tell the world that I ride kangaroos to school.
- This seems to be a bit of a theme among commonwealth nations. Canadians enjoy this too.
- As illustrated by Talking to Americans, whose Crowning Moment of Awesome was perhaps getting then-presidential candidate George W. Bush to accept an endorsement from "Canadian Prime Minister Jean Poutine".
- Not just commonwealth nations. I had some fun during university orientation (in the USA) convincing people I was ex-Austrailian SAS, and had been WIA in Afghanistan by a land mine. I am a Yank who's never been to Australia—I can just make a decent shot at the accent. The sad part was the number who believed it.
- This FAQ from an Australian tourism website show their snarkiness at ignorant people who know jack about Australia brilliantly:
Q: Which direction is North in Australia ? (USA ) |
- Not that America doesn't have its own stereotypes and can have just as much fun with non-Americans who believe them. A common question asked, "Do you have a gun?" "Not since the cops took it from me when I was six."
- Even within America, there are plenty of stereotypes to play with. Not all of them are geographical in nature, either - subcultures such as homeschoolers or various religious groups find a lot of sterotypes and misconceptions about them. Like "So do you have any friends?"
- Californians have a LOT of fun with questions like, "Do you live next to movie stars?" and "Do you go to the beach everyday?".
- Meanwhile, if you meet someone from Texas who acts like the stereotypical Texan(loudmouthed, bombastic, and jingoistic to a tee), then they're probably ****ing with you and having a good laugh while they're at it.
- The home nations of the United Kingdom have great fun with this. Northern Irishmen enjoy pretending they are either IRA psychos or ex-UVF. Scots have fun convincing foreigners (Americans are very prone to this) that "the haggis" is an actual creature, rather than being derived from sheep. Welshmen are all singing, hill-climbing miners for the tourists, and plenty of English people enjoy making aristocratic, tea-drinking pretensions.
- Not that America doesn't have its own stereotypes and can have just as much fun with non-Americans who believe them. A common question asked, "Do you have a gun?" "Not since the cops took it from me when I was six."
- King Harald V of Norway, especially in the deadpan department. He once opened an "informal" dinner at the royal palace with a suggestion that he should read the opening of the Storting (the dullest speech in Norwegian politics). The only thing that would tell you he was joking was the laughter from the politicians present.
- Turkish philosopher/wiseman Nasreddin Hodja (said to have lived sometime during the 13th century) became a legend because of his droll wit and willingness to play The Fool.
- During the Han Dynasty a general named Xiang Yu, captured hopeful-for-the-throne Liu Bang's father and sent Liu Bang an ultimatum: "Surrender or I will boil your venerable sire alive!" Liu Bang replied merely: "Send me a cup of the soup."
- The father didn't end up boiled, in case you were wondering.
- The best thing was that they were sworn brothers before they became enemies. It only worked because Liu Bang knew Xiang Yu wouldn't dare kill his father.
- A vast majority of the British population uses sarcasm, although often to a more subtle degree than typically encountered elsewhere.
- Misha Collins. To a truly superhuman degree. Just read his Twitter. To wit: "If i want to be treated like a celebrity, i've got to start acting like one...from now on I'm going to twit more like @britneyspears. Just ducked into a Starbucks. Gotta get outta the sun, it's like 80 degrees!!!! Iced double-shot skinny lattes keep me going! Peace out!"
- Michael Gambon (whose parts include Dumbledore in Harry Potter). For example, he makes a point of lying in interviews to amuse himself.
Jeremy Clarkson: How old are you now, if that's not a very rude question? |
- Timothy Spall, who plays Wormtail in the Harry Potter films, is pretty snarky about the character. He once said he enjoyed playing Wormtail because "I'm a pin-up in pet shops all over London." Another time, when asked if Wormtail has any redeeming qualities, he answered, "Yes. His lovely tits."
- Us. Don't you even fucking deny it.
- We wouldn't dream of it.
- Well, that endears us to the internet.
- Doesn't it just?
- Well, everyone seems to be getting more and more Snarky these days. It makes sense when we're supposed to look at the Hippie Generation, whom we're generally sired by, as some sort of Crowning Moment of Awesome for the Human race...and seeing the ugly truth behind it.
- Actually it's not that there are more of them, it's just the Internet brings together snarkers of all ages in the same place at the same time.
- The Internets turn you into one. End of story.
- Oh yes. You hit the internet and instantly become the epitome of snide sarcasm.
- Touché
- You know, there's a trope for this somewhere around here...
- Hipsters according to writer Christian Lorentzen. To quote the other wiki, he wrote, '"in their present undead incarnation," are "essentially people who think of themselves as being cooler than America," also referring to them as "the assassins of cool." He also criticizes how the subculture's original menace has long been abandoned and has been replaced with "the form of not-quite-passive aggression called snark."'
- Philosopher Slavoj Zizek.
- Russian soccer player Andrey Arshavin, if his Q&A's from his website are to be trusted. Here's some examples:
Questioner: Hello :) Dear Andrey, tell me please your Skype name ;) With love, Sasha. |
- and
Questioner: Hi Andrey, my question is: how can I improve my dodging technique? |
- The account, by the way, is "Shaving Andrey", If I rember it correctly. Or "Andrey's Shaving".
- Writer Sam Harris produces this regularly with what seems to be a highly trained poker face. He virtually never changed his expression during his speeches, in spite of all the audience laughter. Seeing that his is a very politically sensitive field, examples probably shouldn't be given here. YouTube his videos instead.
- Sir Alfred Hitchcock. To the fucking hilt. "When an actor asks, 'What's my motivation?' I answer, 'Your salary.' ".
- But then, it seems that any British film director seems to be this way. See Ridley Scott for more details.
- Ronald Reagan. No, really.
- This IS the guy who gave us "My fellow Americans, I'm pleased to tell you today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes."
- Japanese rocker Gackt is a weird version of this. Instead of saying things that are sarcastic or cutting, he instead says things that are deliberately absurd, nonsensical, or lewd, but always with a straight face. One particularly infamous joke has led some fans to think that he seriously believes he's a 496 year old vampire.
- Mahatma Gandhi. When asked his opinion on Western civilization, he once responded that it would be a good idea.
- Singer Lily Allen. Pick a song, any song. Especially "The Fear."
- Stand-up comedian Rich Hall is one of the most extreme examples of this trope, even when he is genuinely overjoyed about something, he still sounds incredibly sarcastic.
- Dennis Miller.
- Bill Hicks. Especially funny when you consider he was close friends with Sam Kinison, the absolute antithesis of deadpan.
- Joey Bishop, the only comedian to be allowed in the Rat Pack.
- Jack Dee is the living embodiment of this trope. The man was born middle aged.
- Steven Wright is less often snarky, but has the deadpan down cold.
- Norm MacDonald combines this with Cloudcuckoolander.
- He is so good at it that it's hard not to believe that he's serious sometimes.
- G. K. Chesterton was 300 pounds of friendly snark.
Woman on the street (during WWI): "Mr. Chesterton,why aren't you out at the front?" |
"The Christian Ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult and left untried." |
- David Spade practically reinvented snark in The Nineties.
- One Union Naval officer during the American Civil War, upon seeing the specs to the Monitor said, "Take it down and worship it. It will not be idolatry. It is the image of nothing in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the water under the earth"
- George Clooney and Brad Pitt can both tend towards the snark; put them together and it's hell on the interviewers.
- Rachel Maddow. Full stop.
- Rep. Anthony Weiner, seen here questioning the constitutionality of a Senate bill by reading out loud from a children's book entitled House Mouse, Senate Mouse, stating "perhaps if these were the rules that the Republicans had to follow, it's a much thinner book and it rhymes, maybe you'd get it right..."
- There's also his interview with Fox News, where, after devolving into a shouting match with Megyn Kelly, he gives a sarcastic thumbs-up and states, "Great interview, aces!"
- With Weiner gone from Congress for...well, showing his weiner, Peter De Fazio of Oregon has taken over the role of liberal snarker-in-chief. Just check this video.
- Because their job is to at times listen to some seriously stupid court cases, Supreme Court Justices have been known to insert some snark into their decisions. Justice Antonin Scalia deserves special mention, since he is by far considered the snarkiest Supreme Court Justice of all time.
Justice Scalia: "We Justices must confront what is indeed an awesome responsibility. It has been rendered the solemn duty of the Supreme Court of the United States ... to decide What Is Golf." |
- Amanda Seyfried
- Many quotes attributed to Abraham Lincoln seem to indicate that he was quite effective with the snark. Some examples:
- During the American Civil War, the general-in-chief was not moving as quickly as Lincoln wanted. Said Lincoln:
"If General McClellan does not want to use the army, I would like to borrow it for a time." |
- General John Pope often signed his dispatches with "Headquarters: on his saddle".
"His headquarters are where his hindquarters ought to be." |
- A famous (but likely apocryphal) quote about General Ulysses S. Grant, when some members of the military called him a drunkard:
"Well, I wish some of you would tell me the brand of whiskey that Grant drinks. I would like to send a barrel of it to my other generals." |
- Margaret Thatcher was renowned for her snarkiness. When a heckler was unceremoniously dragged out of a Tory party rally by armed guards she calmly observed: "Never mind, it's wet outside, I expect he wanted to come in. You can't blame him really, it's always nicer where the Tories are." Other gems include:
"Being powerful is like being a lady: if you have to say you are, you probably aren't." |
- and...
"He would rather the poor be poorer as long as the rich were less rich. I give way to the honourable gentleman." |
- Orson Welles somehow managed to maintain a snarky disposition while constantly indulging in Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness. The best example is probably his film F for Fake, which is essentially a feature-length snarkfest regarding the nature of art and forgery. And it is still great because of it.
- And when he was older, Welles served on the Roasting board for the likes of Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin. And boy, did he show how excellently he could do it.
- Linus Torvalds.
- Many of D. C. Douglas's political videos tend to have a very clearly sarcastic, yet hilarious tone, but this one needs a specific mention.
- Murray Gold, composer of the music from Doctor Who, was interviewed by the BBC after a concert event in 2008. He might be the patron saint of Deadpan Snarkers as seen here.
- Spartans despised the art of oratory as a sign of decadence. But they could come up with some remarkable snarks, some of which were remembered for thousands of years.
- Now with the iPhone 4S, we have Siri, Apple's own little snarker. Siri likes to... talk back. More examples here
- Aisha. She was one of the greatest scholars of her time and took no shit from anyone up to and including Allah's Messenger. Muhammad had a little of this in him too, some anecdotes of their marriage are quite funny and touching.
- Frank Zappa
- Finnish F1-driver Kimi Räikkönen - despite (or probably because of) his silent attire - certainly qualifies:
Interviewer: How does it feel to drive over 200 miles per hour? |
- The more outspoken of atheist celebrities are often associated with the Deadpan Snarker personality. For example there's Richard Dawkins:
[Pope John Paul's] polytheistic hankerings were dramatically demonstrated in 1981 when he suffered an assassination attempt in Rome, and attributed his survival to intervention by "Our Lady of Fatima." A maternal hand guided the bullet. One cannot help wondering why she didn't guide it to miss him altogether. Others might think the team of surgeons who operated on him for six hours deserved at least a share of the credit, but perhaps their hands too were maternally guided. The relevant point is that it wasn't just "Our Lady" who in the Pope's opinion guided the bullet, but specifically Our Lady of Fatima. Presumably Our Lady of Lourdes, Our Lady of Guadeloupe, Our Lady of Medjugorje, Our Lady of Akita, Our Lady of Zeitoun, Our Lady of Garabandal, and Our Lady of Knock, were busy on other errands at the time. |
- Richard Dawkins' best snark came when someone said that evolution is "just a theory": "Gravity is a theory. It is also a fact. Anyone who disagrees is invited to jump out a ten story window."
- Christopher Hitchens as well.
Bill Maher: You were talking about Mitt Romney, who was the Mormon candidate for president, and Al said, "as for the one Mormon running, those that really believe in God will defeat him anyway." Now for a guy who's tried to bring so many other people down for inappropriate statements, what do you make of that? |
- "If you gave Falwell an enema, he could have been buried in a matchbox."
- "Is an Iraq War likely to make our terrorist problem worse? Not likely."
- "Jihadists never seem to stop and consider the notion that if they get seventy two virgins in Paradise, then they also get seventy two mothers in law."
- Bill Maher himself, too, including in Religulous.
Bill: Why doesn't [God] just obliterate the devil, and therefore get rid of evil in the world? |
- Peter Cushing, as Christopher Lee found out immediately after meeting him:
Lee: I haven't got any lines! |
- Original Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach John McKay might be the NFL's ultimate example of this trope, something he had plenty of opportunities to display considering it took nearly two full seasons for the team to pick up its first win—once quipping in response to a question on the execution of the Bucs' offense, "I'm in favor of it."
- Jerry Seinfeld.
- Writer Camilo José Cela was a Deadpan Snarker in his public persona, not only using rude words in a time when they were all but unheard in public appearances of celebrities (and very cleverly, but unfortunately hard to translate), and always keeping a straight face.
Journalist: Are you surprised at having won the Nobel Prize in Literature? |
- A very good snark, courtesy of Cela, took place in the Spanish Senate. Cela was appointed senator in the first post-Franco democratic administration (at that time, the King had the right to directly appoint some senators; Cela was one of those). One day, there was some senator giving a rather boring speech, and Cela fell asleep in his seat. The Head of the Senate saw him, and scolded him publically:
Head of the Senate: Honorable Senator Cela! You are asleep! |
- Oh No They Didn't often falls into this, the second most snarkiest community outside of here.
- New Yorker's famous sarcasm sometimes fall into this category, almost unilaterally when dealing with tourists. One ad campaign by the city for the amusement of commuters had quips in print in advertisement spaces in subways, which fell into the overall category of "Overhead In New York". Example:
Tourist (waiting for a subway): Where's the train schedule? I don't see one anywhere. |
- During the days of The Raj one Indian Noble when taking the Prince of Wales pigsticking spoted him making an error that could have been fatal said,"I know you are Prince of Wales, and you know that you are Prince of Wales. But that boar doesn't know you are Prince of Wales."
- Billy Joel can be this sometimes.
- Just watch Taylor Swift's musical SNL monologue. You will believe a pop star can snark.
- H. L. Mencken: A serious candidate for the snarkiest man who ever lived.
- Louis Theroux is an example of this in most of his documentaries.He has a particularly sarcastic and sardonic way of mocking his more ridiculous topics and interviewees.
- Many dictators are this.
- Adolf Hitler is said to have had moments of acerbic wit, an example being: "True Art Is Incomprehensible Anyone who sees and paints a sky green and fields blue should be sterilised]]." By and large, he only laughed at his own jokes although he's said to have enjoyed The Great Dictator by Charlie Chaplin.
- Whilst poking the fire at a party, he told a drunk friend "Don't stand too close, the amount you've had to drink, you'll spontaneously combust."
- He pioneered an admittedly very funny joke about Hermann Goring's egotistical habit of giving himself increasingly grandiose epithets. "One night, Hermann Goring's wife walks into the bedroom, to see her husband wearing nothing but a pair of golden underpants and twirling a baton. She asks him 'Hermann, what are you doing?' to which Goring responds 'I AM PROMOTING MY UNDERPANTS, TO OVERPANTS!'" Hitler reportedly liked his own joke so much that he sent Goring a pair of golden boxer shorts as a birthday present.
- Josef Stalin lived and breathed sarcasm, seldom at the appropriate moment. His reaction upon hearing of his son's failed suicide: "He can't even shoot straight." Even Winston Churchill, despite hating the man admitted that Stalin had "A redeeming sense of humour."
- Upon hearing of Hitler's successful suicide: "So the bastard's dead; too bad we didn't catch him alive."
- "Fuck the Pope. How many divisions does he have anyway?"
- In a literal example of Gallows Humor, "When we hang the capitalists, they will sell us the rope."
- "Historians have to be watched. They can ruin everything."
- "An honest politician is like dry water or metal wood."
- "Churchill is the kind of man who will pick your pocket of a kopek. Roosevelt, Roosevelt is not like that, no he dips his hand in only for larger coins but Churchill, he will do it for a kopek."
- Mao Ze Dong as well.
- "Politics is war without bloodshed. War is politics with bloodshed."
- His comeback to Nikita Kruschev boasting "The difference between you and I is that I come from peasant stock, while you are the son of a wealthy landlord": "Well, there is one similarity between us then; each of us is traitor to his class."
- Kim Jong-il asked a South Korean actress whom he'd abducted what she thought of his physique. When she was too afraid to respond, he simply said "Smaller than a dwarf's turd aren't I." In a similar vein to Hitler allegedly enjoying The Great Dictator, he's said to have found Team America: World Police hilarious, though obviously he's banned his people from watching it.
- He may get this from his father, Kim Il-sung who named the most militarised zone in all of Korea, "The De-Militarised Zone."
- Adolf Hitler is said to have had moments of acerbic wit, an example being: "True Art Is Incomprehensible Anyone who sees and paints a sky green and fields blue should be sterilised]]." By and large, he only laughed at his own jokes although he's said to have enjoyed The Great Dictator by Charlie Chaplin.
- Ayn Rand had a very subtle, sardonic sense of humour that comes across in her books. She also loved to deal some snark in her lectures.
- "Lady, if you don't understand my books then you sure as Hell won't understand my voice."
- When asked if she was the head of a cult, "Young lady, I have dedicated myself to the cause of individualism; common sense dictates that one cannot have a cult of individualists; do you have common sense?"
- On the subject of radical feminists who carry signs saying "We are not sex objects", she wrote "They're in no danger of that."
- To William F. Buckley, "Mr. Buckley, you are far too intelligent to believe in God." Unfortunately, Buckley didn't see the funny side.
- When told in a hotel that she might have to catch a taxi, "Shall I show some leg?"
- Her annotations on C. S. Lewis are pure, hilarious snark from beginning to end.