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"Even funnier than the man who has been made ridiculous, however, is the man who, having had something funny happen to him, refuses to admit that anything out of the way has happened, and attempts to maintain his dignity." |
Just because a character doesn't have a sense of humor themselves doesn't mean that they can't make the audience laugh. The Comically Serious is a character who ostensibly has a serious, composed personality, but is funny because he or she is put into funny situations. This works with character types who react calmly to unusual situations, especially those that more realistically induce hysteria or other strong emotions, such as the Deadpan Snarker, The Stoic, and The Quiet One.
Typically works as a Straight Man in the cast, although they may have some odd weakness. Often, they become the victim of Not So Above It All.
Comically Serious characters turn up in Britcom.
Bizarrely enough, has a very similar comedic style to the certain kinds of Cloudcuckoolander, in that the Cloudcuckoolander's comedy often comes from serious reactions to their own oddities, while The Comically Serious's comes from serious reactions to other people's/things'.
Subtrope of Bathos. Also related to Serious Business, as comically serious characters have a tendency to indulge in it. Might also be the Butt Monkey in settings where being serious is seen as an offense.
Compare No Sense of Humor, So Unfunny It's Funny.
Contrast Dude, Not Funny.
Anime and Manga[]
- Karakuri Circus — Narumi's nonexistent sense of humor is a problem — because only causing someone to laugh will halt his Incurable Cough of Death. Crosses over into So Unfunny It's Funny, at times.
- Raven from Gravion, albeit this is a result of literal Becoming the Mask. Ayaka, the current "Raven" is a woman and far more emotional than her unfunny alterego.
- Bleach's Byakuya Kuchiki in the omakes. He makes a joke. Once. It makes Renji Freak-Out. He tries to do a comedy routine on stage. The audience was disturbed. Also note his obsession with Seaweed Ambassador. Finally, he sure loves his bunny drawings... which look exactly like Rukia's.
- In addition to playing roles that are structurally very similar, Byakuya and Ulquiorra have similar personalities. Like Byakuya, Ulquiorra's comically serious tendencies show up in a couple of Omake and episodes previews.
- Jin in Samurai Champloo. At first glance, he comes off as a stoic, cool, smooth, handsome Badass, but then the series proceeds to place him in some of the most comedic of situations alongside his companions. This includes a torture montage, working at an eel stand, getting a sore back after a night with unattractive courtesans, having to pretend to be a tour guide to win back his pawned swords, and dressing up as a female prostitute.
- It's the fact that he's always so damn serious that gives him the Crowning Moment of Funny for the entire flippin' show. He's kneeling on a rock in the middle of a river while Mugen and Fuu are over on the shore. With no warning he suddenly dives in, swims and flails around like an utter madman, RUNS up to them in double-time animation (freaking them out in the process) and collapses in a prone-kneeling position before them, panting heavily... And holding a pouch full of (unknowingly, forged) gold coins. MUST be seen to be believed.
- Neon Genesis Evangelion: During the very rare occasions of humor, Commander Gendoh Ikari and Professor Kouzou Fuyutsuki fit this perfectly. "It's hot." "Yes."
- Gendoh can also stare depressingly at Eva-01... while in an orange raincoat.
- There's also something funny about Fuyutsuki facepalming and muttering "Those kids are embarrassing us again..." when Shinji and Asuka are bickering at the end of Episode 9.
- In the dub he says "Those darn kids are embarrassing us again". There's something very comical about that, as the wizened old Vice-Commander can't even say "damn". It comes out sounding like a line from a sitcom.
- Switzerland from Axis Powers Hetalia is generally a serious, stern character, and occasionally throws out gems like this in his typically serious, stern manner:
Christmas is about family and loving people. [Pause.] Now get bent. |
- Japan has his moments as well, especially during Germany's training sessions on how to deal with being asked to react if England attacks, or what to do if the enemy asks him to surrender. He gives his answers in complete seriousness:
You should imitate William the First's loud voice! |
- In the first Fullmetal Alchemist anime, Roy Mustang is like this up until he's confronted with Black Hayate and gives a speech about how he loves dogs! Later in the episode, he reveals that his first executive order as Fuhrer President would be to make all female army personnel wear... tiny minskirts!
- His lieutenant Riza Hawkeye is a rare female example in the manga omake, doing such things as trying to measure Ed's height against his will, introducing her dog and responding to Mustang's musing that he might want to grow some facial hair by drawing on his face with a marker all with a completely straight face .
- Azumanga Daioh's the unexpressive Sakaki and the stern Yomi.
- Keroro Gunsou — Sergeant Frog lampshades and spoofs this relentlessly with no-nonsense Badass soldier Giroro.
- Sailor Moon — Mamoru Chiba/Tuxedo Mask is a pretty serious guy, but can sometimes lapse into this. Particularly when his child-like girlfriend Usagi/Moon (or any of the Sailor Senshi) say or do something that is so over-the-top all he can do is stare at them with a look that says "Moving right along..."
- Haruka/Uranus also slips once or twice into this.
- The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya
- Kyon, who is also the Deadpan Snarker; his creativity and sense of wonder is likely just repressed, though. His aloofness doesn't prevent him from getting stuck in alternate worlds with a Magical She Is Not My Girlfriend, or from finding himself smack-dab in the middle of mysterious murder cases.
- Yuki Nagato is another example, reacting with robotic coldness to all the wacky hijinks created by Haruhi and Mikuru. Yuki herself is not above a friendly prank or two. Even if she doesn't show external signs of enjoying it...
- Kyon's genderbent counterpart, Kyonko, is even better at this than the original.
- Juubei Kakei in GetBackers (at least as an adult). Toss in blindness, unfamiliarity with the modern world, and copious amounts of Ho Yay. And for extra hilarity, they told him he wasn't funny. He was devastated.
- Zelgadiss from The Slayers. Which of course makes him the butt of jokes once the series goes comedic.
- Somehow, Unfunny Hatori Sohma from Fruits Basket manages to put up with Chivalrous Pervert Shigure Sohma and White-Haired Pretty Boy Ayame Sohma. Hatori is the only serious one of the three, without much of a sense of humour. Although this is justified, given his traumatic past. Maybe he's just plain tired of Shigure and Ayame's antics, after all this time?
- Yuki can sometimes fall into this, especially after he starts trying to head the Student Council.
- Code Geass — Part of the appeal of Lady of War Cornelia li Brittania is the potential for comic seriousness in just about any comedic situation she could be put into. Fanartists have caught onto this, and she's frequently shown looking flustered in comparison to the other characters. Canon toys a bit with this, considering the reaction she had to Clovis's raunchy swimsuits. And Cornelia was naked or at least topless when she commented on how Euphie shouldn't wear any of them. She was concerned about wearing one herself, and it was quite amusing to hear Euphie forcibly putting one on her.
- Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha — Chrono's expression of cold professionalism remains the same even when he's wearing a bandage tied as a ribbon, combing down a coworker's Idiot Hair, or lightening up the atmosphere with a joke.
- Re-L in Ergo Proxy gets this a couple of times, due to her being a Very Serious Intelligence Operative...who ended up Walking the Earth with Vincent, who is effectively The Fool with superpowers.
- One Piece has Roronoa Zoro. He plays both 'badass' and 'buffoon' very well, but what makes it funny is that he's so serious the whole time.
- A filler episode set soon after Enies Lobby uses this as its entire premise (the title, "Zoro's Slapstick Housework Help", should tell you everything you need to know)
- He borders on being a Comedic Sociopath. He's a cold-blooded killer, but when he angrily shouts at and threatens someone for giving him directions when he gets lost on a straight, narrow cliff, you know you're supposed to laugh at him.
- Zoro and Usopp are cuffed together while facing two opponents. With a totally serious face throughout. Zoro still is completely serious even as he executes his (innovative but completely ridiculous) plan. See it to believe it.
Zoro: I have a plan. We play rock-paper-scissors. The loser cuts off his hand. |
- Nico Robin is another example, especially given she's the only crew member who never adopts crazy facial expressions when shocked or angry. She once calmly remarked how she knew Zoro hadn't been eaten by a shark because the water hadn't turned red, much to her crewmates' shock. She's also an occasional Straight Man for the crew's antics.
- And a less prominent character who is a notably perfect example: During the Enies Lobby showdown, Cipher Pol 9 agent Kaku takes this trope to hilarious lengths (all ye who have not watched his fight with Zoro, spoil at your own risk): not only does he turn into a ridiculous block-nosed giraffe-man, he gets defensive about it, and says things like "Witness the power of a giraffe!" all while keeping a perfectly straight face. Using attacks like "Giraffe Canon" and "Nose Gun" is several times funnier just because of how absurdly seriously Kaku takes himself. No wonder he came in 9th in the following popularity poll.
- Though he's right about being dangerous.
- Jinbei is starting to evolve into one by virtue of hanging out with Luffy and Hancock on Amazon Lily.
- Trafalgar Law does not appear to be sure how to react to the Straw Hats' usual antics when he offers to ally with them in Punk Hazard, resulting in this trope.
- Tezuka and Sanada from The Prince of Tennis, especially in the "chibi" episodes. Preceded by Rukawa, Akagi, Maki and Uozumi from Slam Dunk.
- Full Metal Panic! — Sousuke Sagara. At least it tends to actually be his fault, though. He eventually plays the straight man to his own mecha.
- This also applies to his appearances in crossover games like Super Robot Wars and Another Century's Episode — in the latter, his stoic attitude brings Macross Frontier's Running Gag of Alto being mistaken for a girl to new comedic heights.
- Mahou Sensei Negima
- Occasionally Setsuna acts like this. Her mentor-figure Eishun played this to comical absurdity in his own group.
- Fate, of all people, had a comically serious moment. His companions really didn't know how to react to it... What was his moment? Fate's Pet the Dog moment with his severed arm.
- Chisame also qualifies on some occasions; most of her humor concerns her reactions to whatever absurd situation she ends up in.
- And in Cosmo Entelechia, we have Dynamis, who can be a really really Large Ham, but is always dead serious.
- Naruto
- Sasuke Uchiha and Neji Hyuuga work out like this, though moreso in the anime. Of course, when something funny actually happens to them, it's just that much better. Seeing Sasuke with those white circle eyes is good for a laugh.
- Best example of this has to be Shippuden episode 181 (a filler) where Sasuke gets attacked by an ostrich.
- One of the few fillers worth watching has Neji spazzing out when he eats curry. Were it anyone else making those expression, it wouldn't be as funny. This trope is probably why Episode 101 is so popular despite being filler.
- Also, Shino. Is it really anyone wonder they dedicated an entire filler episode to
gettingdrugging him to laugh? His return of him sulking because Naruto failed to recognize him right away. Also his reaction to his bugs being eaten by that anteater. - And Kakashi. Remember his reaction when Lee takes off his heavy wrist/leg bands upon Gai's request? As everyone is all OMG WTF BBQ, he just covers his masked face and thinks "You really overdid it, Gai..." To enjoy a true "what the?" reaction from Kakashi, see the beginning of his fight against Naruto and Sakura in Shippuuden.
- And Sai, too. His reaction to Konohamaru's yaoi version of the Sexy no Jutsu, which involves him and Sasuke naked? "Ah, so that's me."
- Sasuke Uchiha and Neji Hyuuga work out like this, though moreso in the anime. Of course, when something funny actually happens to them, it's just that much better. Seeing Sasuke with those white circle eyes is good for a laugh.
- Giovanni from the Pokémon cartoon. Which of course, only makes Meowth's progressively delusional Imagine Spots that much weirder.
- And recently, the Team Rocket trio themselves in the "Best Wishes" arc.
- One of the highlights of the Darker than Black OVA episode (which spoofs the main series) is the resident Emotionless Girl reciting smutty yaoi fanfic in a dead-serious Creepy Monotone.
- Vanilla from Galaxy Angel, less so in the video games. A stoic, Emotionless Girl couldn't possible be funny, right? You'd be wrong.
- In the recent crossover movie between Lupin III and Detective Conan, Goemon jumps from a plane and cuts through several floors of a building on his way to land in the vault. Once there, he says "Once again I have cut a worthless object" as usual, completely serious... and his legs are wobbling from the impact, seemingly unnoticed. This is not the first time he has done something like this. He tries so very hard to be serious and dignified... but when he hangs out with Lupin...
- A number of characters from Eyeshield 21 qualify:
- Hayato Akaba of the Bando Spiders remains almost completely stone-faced while striking goofy rock-star poses for no apparent reason, and has a tendency to make convoluted music metaphors with the same completely serious expression.
- Seijuro Shin of the Oujou White Knight has a tendency to break any piece of technology more advanced than a stopwatch, and is occasionally seen going to comically ridiculous efforts in his training.
- Shun Kakei of the Kyoshin Poseidons always takes the antics of his wackier teammates in stride, whether it's the rivalry between Ohira and Onishi or whatever hijinks Mizumachi is up to.
- Pani Poni Dash! — Rei Tachibana. Nothing makes her humorless nature more glaring than when her pissed-off face takes up two thirds of the screen while Himeko rises up on the remaining one-third and shoots off her motormouth while rocking side-to-side.
- Tsurugi Inugami would count even more, with him being the serious, near-emotionless one in the same class as characters like Misao Nanjo and Behoimi (not to mention that said class is taught by Old Geezer).
- Jojo's Bizarre Adventure — Joseph Joestar in his youth once tried to sneak into a Nazi base dressed as a woman. A 6-foot-plus, musclebound woman. When the soldiers freak out and raise their guns, he is genuinely shocked that his disguise failed. Jotaro Kujoh meanwhile has a perfect poker face, as he demonstrates to good effect when gambling against D'Arbsoule.
- Stein from Soul Eater with his Running Gag of him not be able to slide in a office chair without falling.
Let me try that again. |
- Cromartie High School uses this to great effect. No matter how strange the situation, the cast never loses their stoic expressions.
- Most of Erza's funniest moments in Fairy Tail derive from her ability to completely serious in absurd situations.
- Ouran High School Host Club occasionally uses Mori's perpetual seriousness for a few laughs.
- Heinel plays this part in Future GPX Cyber Formula when dealing with Gudelhian's antics.
- Garterbelt, Panty and Stocking's stern taskmaster. Ghost-slaying at God's command is Serious Business, and there's nothing absurd about ghosts of turd, semen, boogers or vomit.
- In Dragon Ball Z, rather surprisingly, the one who takes up this spot is none other than... Vegeta. Yes, Vegeta. Ever since the Buu Saga, the plot often puts the uptight and arrogant Warrior Prince with next to No Sense of Humor in borderline or downright ridiculous situations that have him losing his cool. Being the Number Two to an Idiot Hero like Goku and the husband to a Bunny Ears Lawyer Tsundere like Bulma Briefs do NOT help him at all.
- If Vegeta isn't handy for such things, Piccolo will be the one in the role. Seen very clearly when he has to train and take care of Goten and Trunks, or in the infamous "Gokuy and Piccolo must learn to drive" filler episode.
Comic Books[]
- Batman often plays the unfunny role. Anything can be made funnier by adding Batman as the straight guy. A rare exception is found in the The Killing Joke, when The Joker tells him a joke that makes them both laugh. More typically: In "Hush", when Nightwing and Batman are in the Batmobile discussing Catwoman (well, Nightwing is discussing her... Batman is glaring off into the distance ignoring him):
Nightwing: If you don't want to talk with someone, why do you even have a passenger seat in the Batmobile? —Hush
|
- To a lesser extent, Wolverine tends to be this. Whenever he teams up with young girls (which happens more often than you might think) it tends to be a mix between Crowning Moment of Heartwarming and Crowning Moment of Funny.
- Plastic Man. Hard as it may be to believe these days, in his Golden Age Jack Cole comics he was the straight man surrounded by lunatics. Back then Plastic Man was a former criminal and was guilty of some rather serious crimes.
- Out of the lot of the villainous Secret Six, the role of comically serious goes to Bane. It says something when you try to act fatherly to a grown woman by treating her like a ten year old.
- Moon Knight — The title character is something of a Captain Ersatz of Batman, usually takes this role when played against Spider-Man. Moon Knight is also insane Depending on the Writer. For example, during super-hero rooftop meeting in Ultimate Spider-Man #107:
Spider-Man: Don't mind me, I'm just here for the chicken wings. |
- Cable to Deadpool's antics.
- Previously, Cyclops would fulfill this role. As pointed out before aby a few fans, personality wise, he's not unlike Batman, meaning that any situation from his perspective could become funnier, or more awesome. He once had a oneshot story a while back, that involved him fighting evil circus folk while stealing a man's bike and leaving an apologetic note afterwards. A lot of humour was derived from the situation he was in, his reaction, and the ending which turned a small number of bits into a Brick Joke. Sadly, The X-Men are being as serious as they can now, so no more comically serious adventures for Cyke.
- Dream / Morpheus in The Sandman, either through being the straight man to the likes of Delirium or Immortal Immaturity. When his latest affair ends badly at the beginning of "Brief Lives", he starts brooding on the balcony like a teenager — and causes downpours throughout the Dreaming just to complete the pose.
Film[]
- Just about any character played by Christopher Walken.
- Leslie Nielsen was a somewhat successful dramatic actor. When Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker came along and had him act the exact same way in a crazy situation in their film Airplane!, it made him a comedy legend. The rest is history. Hence Leslie Nielsen Syndrome: it is difficult to impossible to watch older Leslie Nielsen films without stifling inappropriate giggles—including such classics as Forbidden Planet.
- The entire movie is based on this trope. Only Johnny acts silly.
Stryker: Surely, you can't be serious. |
- Lloyd Bridges as Commander Cain in the original Battlestar Galactica can induce a similar reaction, having spoofed such military commander roles in Hot Shots. The Hot Shot movies treat everything completely serious, especially when Topper Harley (Charlie Sheen) ends up using a chicken as an arrow.
- Monty Python and the Holy Grail: Graham Chapman plays King Arthur completely straight through some of the most absurd moments in theatrical history, his stodginess in the face of carefree lunacy played for laughs.
- Terminator series — The Terminators often have moments like this, due to having No Social Skills.
- Men in Black — Agent K. So much so that when they were filming the first movie, Tommy Lee Jones was worried he wouldn't be funny, and they had to keep reassuring him that Agent K would be funny in context. He was.
- Death in Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey gets a creepy introduction when he arrives to take Bill and Ted to Hell. He promptly gets Melvined by them and spends the rest of the film desperately trying to regain his dignity, which is shattered over and over again the more time he spends with them. In the end he decides 'Screw It', and becomes their bass player.
"Don't overlook *my* butt, I work out all the time. And reaping burns a lot of calories." |
- Buster Keaton started his unfunny act young. Working with his father on the stage, he was continually told to "freeze the puss" because a puzzled or frowning face after a gag made the audience laugh harder. This later carried over to his film career — when he's on screen, his face is a worried blank, his body is ramrod straight but his legs do the talking.
- A biography of him explained this trope in action. As a child performer he wore a suitcase handle on the back of his jacket, allowing the adults to literally pick him up and toss him around the stage. The act ended with him getting shoved through a bass drum. If he emerged from the drum smiling and waving at the audience (to assure them he was unharmed), people assumed he was being abused and that the smiling was just something he had been ordered to do. If he kept his face deadpan throughout, he brought the house down every time.
- Harry Potter — the late Alan Rickman's subdued performance as Snape was sometimes this, especially in the later films (Cormack puking on his shoes comes to mind).
- Rolling his eyes and pulling his sleeves back to push Ron and Harry's faces back into their work wouldn't have been nearly as funny if he'd had any change of attitude or expression.
- Who could forget this little gem from Order of the Phoenix:
Dolores Umbridge:[during an inspection] You applied first for the Defense Against the Dark Arts post, is that correct? |
- The Devil's Rejects — Oddly enough, Otis Driftwood is Comically Serious when he is in the company of Captain Spaulding and Baby Firefly.
- Inception — Arthur, as he's the most serious in the Dream Team and smiles but twice in the whole film. He does have a sense of humour though.
- Dragnet — Dan Aykroyd as Joe Friday
- Bruce Lee has a few moments as the comically serious in some of his movies
- Margaret Dumont in the films of The Marx Brothers and others.
- Moe Howard from The Three Stooges is cast as the most "serious" Stooge and often berates the other two to stop screwing around, but he is no less likely to get a pie in the face or clonked with a shovel than anyone else in the cast. This is a natural extension of the much older role of the whiteface clown as a Straight Man to the more rambunctious auguste in professional clowning. Some people have trouble with smart clowns...
- Home Alone: Harry to a certain extent. He’s more serious than his partner Marv, but he still falls victim to slapstick.
- Hoodwinked: Red is the most serious of the four main characters, but she manages to be comedic in her own ways, such as when she accidentally causes a crash (but the driver thankfully is fine).
Literature[]
- Most of the characters in the Discworld universe, but Vetinari and Vimes particularly stick out. Also Granny Weatherwax. Just look at her experience with theater in Wyrd Sisters.
- Captain Carrot. Who will track down Death on the ground he's the only witness to a murder.
- The thing is, this is Discworld, where such things are not only plausible, but legitimate.
- Captain Carrot. Who will track down Death on the ground he's the only witness to a murder.
- In the Sword of Truth series, Nicci, after her Heel Face Turn, very much so.
- The narrator of The Remains of the Day is a butler who's trying very hard to develop a sense of humor late in life, because he thinks his new employer would appreciate it. His Spock Speak Wall of Text musings on the subject are very funny, until they reappear in the last scene.
- Ax of Animorphs is an alien who doesn't quite understand human humor, but his weird mannerisms among other things make him into a very funny character.
- Marco was convinced that the Yeerks did have a sense of humor because nobody as comically serious as them could do it intentionally. Such gems of humor from the Yeerks include making an entrance to their secret lair under a McDonald's and then having the password be "I'd like a Happy Meal with extra happy" and having the audio for the self-destruct system announce "Base will Self-Destruct in 15 minutes. Have a nice day."
- The eternally unflappable Jeeves of Jeeves and Wooster. His expressions and intonations never change as he responds rationally and politely to the ridiculous things that go on around him and the ramblings of his Cloudcuckoolander boss.
Bertie: I suppose it bowled the poor blighter over absolutely? |
Live Action TV[]
- Seth Green as Oz in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Also, Giles and Angel.
- Indeed, much of the humor on Angel's own show was derived from his being deadpan in comical or bizarre situations, or how absolutely seriously he took his role as Brooding Hero of the Night With a Dark Past, to the point where it became a bit absurd. Cases in point: his dancing (it's dreadful but thankfully imaginary), leaping heroically into the wrong convertible and thereby averting a car chase scene, the discovery that he enjoys Barry Manilow but cannot sing to save his unlife, and dressing up in a ridiculous tourist outfit in order to apparently annoy information out of a local mafia boss. All of these he treats with complete seriousness or hides to keep his brooding cred.
- The best was when he was turned into a muppet. For most of an episode he was a dour, brooding, serious fuzzy puppet while everyone else was intensely amused.
- Sam the Eagle from the The Muppet Show frequently commented on his own program in a condescending tone, usually tripping up over his own hypocrisy (he once followed up a complaint about how uncultured the show was with a comment that the guest of the week, ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev, was his "favorite opera singer") or not being aware how silly things actually were (his favorite skit on the show was the "classy" duets by Wayne and Wanda, which always ended in some slapstick disaster).
- Bert in Sesame Street.
- Spoofed in Monty Python's Flying Circus, where a man talking and acting in a blandly everyday manner causes convulsive laughter in everyone he walks past. And that's even an obscure reference. Does no one remember the Colonel? "Now I do my best to keep things moving along, but I'm not having things getting silly." He started as the straight man in his own sketch, and they kept using him to end a sketch for which they had not written a punch line.
Colonel: Right! Stop that! Silly! And a bit suspect, I think... |
- Michael Bluth of Arrested Development.
- Also, Wayne Jarvis, the self-described consummate professional.
Michael: Are you serious? |
- Much of the humor in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine comes from putting Worf through this. Data and Odo are also frequent targets.
Worf: Sir, I protest! I am not a merry man! |
- Same applies to Data's daughter Lal, who summed up the essence of this trope after noting that other children were laughing at her.
Lal: Then, without understanding humor, I have somehow mastered it. |
- Tuvok was often paired with goofy Alien Scrappy Neelix. Interestingly, in a flashback, Sulu commented that Tuvok was stuck up even for a Vulcan. (Sulu implicitly compares him to Spock.) Which leads to the hilarious image of him being Comically Serious in a group of Vulcans.
- And Worf, above, is often shown as being more serious than most Klingons. (This may be a case of him trying too hard to follow an outsider's ideas of Klingon culture, as compared to those actually brought up in it; then again, he might just have a grim and serious temperament.) Michael Dorn has a charming smile, but the best you're likely to get out of Worf is a look of satisfaction.
- Data discovers the concept of humor and attempts to learn to tell jokes and stand-up. The image of Comically Serious Data, on par with Worf, trying to tell jokes and failing miserably is—on paper — more hilarious than the jokes themselves could ever hope to be. Unfortunately, to say they misfired would be a dramatic understatement—the resulting episode, "The Outrageous Okona", is regarded as one of the worst in the entire Trek canon. He can hardly be blamed for getting it wrong considering the jokes being endorsed by Guinan and the greatest comedian of the 20th century. "Because you're a 'droid and I'm a 'noid."
- At least once Data and Worf both pulled this off in the same scene. Data is about to leave the Enterprise and asks Worf to take care of his cat Spot:
- Teal'c on Stargate SG-1 was the team's Unfunny. He might have laughed only once in the show's 10-year run — at a Jaffa joke no one else on the team got. Once in a while he was a bit of a Deadpan Snarker, and he was frequently the victim of Metaphorgotten, but he was always a serious person. Made even more hilarious on a meta level by how downright jolly his actor Christopher Judge is in real life. At first his understanding of human humor is more limited, but he learns more as the series goes on, giving us such moments as early on when O'Neill is lying sick in bed:
Teal'c (deadpan): Undomesticated equines could not stop me. |
- The Jaffa race as a whole counts.
- Dr. Wen from Scrubs. Carla as well: you can get plenty of laughs out of her and her storylines, but it's actually made a point of a few times in the show that she can't tell or do good jokes.
- M* A* S* H — Col. Potter, Major Freeman, and Major Winchester. They have their breakdowns, but compared to Hawkeye, Trapper, B.J., Radar, Frank Burns, Margaret, Klinger, and good God Col. Flagg....
- Lilith on Cheers and Frasier... she thinks Zeppo Marx is the funniest of the Marx Brothers. Interestingly, Zeppo was often said to be the funniest one in real life.
- Cameron of The Sarah Connor Chronicles is a solid example of this, when she is put in absurd or socially delicate situations, and tends to react in an extremely straightforward and practical manner. Jonh Henry and Catherine Weaver tend to be this, too. The odd thing here is how much quiet comedy the writers generate between two comically serious characters.
- Chuck — NSA Agent John Casey is the most serious out of the 'Operation Bartowski' team, but he's often the bringer of the most laughs, usually because he's put into amusing circumstances.
- News Radio: The whole reason Dave Foley was cast as Dave Nelson (a character created with him in mind) was the fact that Foley has a talent for getting laughs by subtly and seriously reacting to funny or crazy things, more so than the actors who are actually doing them, as creator Paul Simms discovered by watching him steal scenes opposite the Chicken Lady.
- Castiel on Supernatural. He doesn't even react when he sits on a whoopie cushion, inadvertently interrupting his own Serious Business speech about the Anti Christ.
Cas: [completely serious] That wasn't me. |
- See also his utter failure at pretending to be an FBI Agent and:
This isn't funny, Dean! The voice says I'm almost out of minutes. |
- From Conan O'Brien's more recent recurring sketches: Real Life associate producer Jordan Schlansky.
- Jamie from MythBusters is one of the quintessential examples, in contrast to the Adam, who delights in clowning.
- In the episode where they tested the concept of Latex Perfection, Adam got a lot of mileage out of acting zany while disguised as Jamie (though he was able to pull off serious too). On the other hand, Jamie had a hard time acting appropriately goofy while disguised as Adam.
- True Blood: Eric Northman. A good example—though funnier in context, so spoilered punchline—is when he's speaking in Russian, and his whole speech is subtitled, but he spontaneously switches back to English to call someone a gold-digging whore!
- Dr. K from Power Rangers RPM. For a character who is a complete Deadpan Snarker with No Social Skills, she provides almost as much humor as the designated Butt Monkey of the series. It mainly comes from the fact that she is often placed in socially awkward situations. (See "Ranger Yellow, Part 2", "Doctor K", and especially "In Or Out" for proof.)
- The Big Bang Theory: Sheldon. Cooper. In fact, it's pretty much his entire shtick.
- Ben Wyatt in Parks and Recreation.
- Glee's Dalton Academy Warblers, individually or en masse, are this to a T.
Thad: You mock us, sir! |
- Hotch in Criminal Minds can be this very much sometimes, especially when put with Reid, though occasionally also with Morgan.
- Jon Stewart on The Daily Show is not generally this, but when paired with his correspondents for a bit, will often time take on this role as the serious straight newsman/interviewer.
- The humor of Loriot, probably Germany's most famous comedian, is always this, revolving around people in awkward situations who always keep appearances and manners, which only makes the situations more absurd and hilarious, and frankly, embarrassing. A great deal of his early humor is attributed to the fact that people in Germany in the 60s actually did behave a lot like that and he was merely pointing out the absurdity of trying to keep one's dignity by ignoring the embarrassment.
- PR consultant and professional snoop Nick Hewer has shades of this in The Apprentice, which the editors occasionally play up — the man's so deadpan that the second he comes within five metres of a stuffed toy he becomes instantly funny. The real life equivalent of the Batman comedy mannequin. Following an appearance on a popular BBC panel show, however, it turned out that the Apprentice team had, if anything, been downplaying Nick's deadpan genius. And all he had to do was wear a jumper and make some faces...
- Red Foreman embodies this trope in That '70s Show. While he does have a lighter side that pops up from time to time, 99% of the humor derived from his character comes from his stern personality clashing with the absolutely absurd plots going on around him.
- In the classic TV Batman, Batman and Robin are the straight men to the lunacy of the villains.
- Also Chief O’Hara and Comissioner Gordon. For Camp to work, the material must be handled with subdued drama. Comissioner Gordon delivered the most inane lines with great aplomb, utter conviction and just the right amount of drama.
- Life's Too Short gives us Liam Neeson's attempt at improv comedy.
Music[]
- Steve Bender, one of the two German members of the 80's multi-national band Dschinghis Khan. Lampshaded in several YouTube comments which mention how utterly serious he is, when compared with his more cheerful bandmates.
- David Choi is so serious a video on YouTube is dedicated to making him laugh.
- Just watch the unofficial video for "Whipped Cream" by Ludo and try to keep a straight face as long as the band does.
Professional Wrestling[]
- WWE
- Wrestler Steve Blackman often served as the Unfunny in a tag team with one of the federation's wackier wrestlers, including Cloudcuckoolander Al Snow and white-boy wannabe rapper Grandmaster Sexay.
- "If I can be serious for a minute..." WCW/WWE/ECW alumnus Lance Storm also used a (fairly humorous) Unfunny gimmick ("Your days of unabashed hijinks are about to end."). The WWE Flanderised him into a robot-like Stoic who would later learn how to have "fun" and dance his way down to the ring. It's a far cry from his WCW and ECW days, where he was both Comically Serious and Badass.
- Kane, who for years had been the most serious of performers, had a point for about two or three years where he could be relied on for some of the best comedy moments—because no matter how many times he did it, you didn't expect Kane to crack jokes, except deadpan.
- Beth Phoenix comes off as unfunny since she plays straight woman to her boyfriend Santino, her intern Rosa Mendez, frequent tag team partner Jillian Hall and the crazy characters they tend to attract.
- "Hey Tomko, gimme a beat." "No."
Stand-up Comedy[]
Radio[]
- Bob and Ray had a number of interview sketches that used this—with one (usually Bob) as himself, trying to make sense out of the other as the increasingly loopy subject.
- Wiretap — Jonathan Goldstein as portrayed in most of the "conversations" on his radio show.
Theater[]
- Malvolio from Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night is often played this way.
Video Games[]
- Sasha Nein from Psychonauts. He's more or less The Spock, but gets the most amusing punishments—such as having his brain removed, leaving him to babble about TVs and hackeysacks, or being squashed on the underside of a giant rubber stamper.
- Marcus Fenix of Gears of War never smiles. Not even on his birthday, when they give him the cake. He seems to have something of an ironic sense of humour, though.
Marcus: Hey, Colonel! I guess we are the support, huh? |
- BlazBlue — Hakumen is like this during his "Help Me Dr. Kokonoe!" segment. Also, he's so Unfunny that he has no joke endings.
- Metal Gear — Solid Snake from these gritty, realistic games is a sight to behold fighting and commenting on cartoony Nintendo characters. He also plays that role in his own games too from time to time. Cardboard boxes, anyone?
- Valygar from Baldur's Gate II, especially when bantering with Jan Jansen, Minsc, Imoen or Haer'Dhalis (as the latter discovers, Valygar is surprisingly adept at puns). For that matter, almost any character becomes The Comically Serious when paired with Jan, especially Valygar and Keldorn. Or Minsc, even the PC.
- The spin-off City of Heroes comic revealed Statesman to be one of these. To the point where him making a remark about letting Manticore die gave the latter pause because he couldn't tell if Statesman was actually deadpanning a joke or not.
- Cloud Strife in Final Fantasy VII. Despite being intended to be a stoic leader, nobody can take him seriously when cross dressing to save Tifa, giving mouth to mouth to a little girl, and 'jumping with Mr. Dolphin'.
- Yuri Hyuga from the Shadow Hearts series. Somehow he manages to remain Badass even while surrounded by a Large Ham pro wrestler, a ditzy fortune teller, an intelligent wolf and the princess of Russia. (It's mainly because he's pretty goofy himself.)
- Moreso in the second game, which had a goofier cast, particurly as the events of the first game had made him a Knight in Sour Armor / Grumpy Bear / Determinator.
- Mana Khemia: Alchemists of Al-Revis gives us The Stoic Jerk with a Heart of Gold Roxis, who is a frequent target of humiliation from fellow workshop member Flay and especially his own Mana. The Highlight was the 'Secret Crush' Incident. Never has anyone been so hilarious and sympathetic at once.
- In WarioWare: Smooth Moves, the silly descriptions for the "forms" used with the Wiimote are made even funnier by the deadpan, Ben Stein-esque tone of the narrator reading them.
- BioWare likes this character type almost as much as their regular snarkers.
- Sten in Dragon Age: Origins, especially if he's present during the scene where your team attempts to help break you out of prison.
Oghren: My partner and I are, ah, performers... |
- Aveline continues this tradition in Dragon Age II. Some of the funniest moments of the game stem from watching her try to confess her feelings for Guardsman Donnic.
- Same token: Fenris. Smiles all of maybe once or twice, makes his few jokes hilarious by delivering them with a perfect deadpan.
- Legion from Mass Effect 2 falls into this every once in a while, notably in his accidental "infiltration" of the Citadel.
Legion: Geth do not infiltrate. |
- Much of the Shadow Broker's dossier on Legion takes on this tone as well, as we find Legion spends his spare time playing Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game, GTA ripoffs, and DatingSims. Hilarity Ensues.
- Squall Leonhart of Final Fantasy VIII, because There Are No Therapists on his planet to tell him that getting over your missing sister by joining a PMC at five years old isn't a very good idea.
- Similarly, his Rule 63 counterpart, Paine from Final Fantasy X-2:
- Radical Dreamers — "The simple fact that Magil tried to make a joke just there makes me stop and forget where I am for a second."
- Shantae from Shantae with her Visible Silence.
- Boone from Fallout: New Vegas. A man who takes his beret extremely seriously.
- Frog from Chrono Trigger.
- Cyan Garamonde from Final Fantasy VI. Much humor is drawn from his interactions with Gau the feral child, his reaction to the flirtatious remarks of a cabaret dancer, and his embarrassment when his companions discover his hobby of crafting beautiful silk flowers.
- Prince Innes from Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones. He takes himself so damn seriously and yet he can barely have conversations with other people that don't end up with the other going "...huh?". Unless it's L'Arachel, who unlocks Innes's inner Tsundere. It has to be seen to be believed.
- Prince Xander of Nohr from Fire Emblem Fates is so much this, his siblings PANICKED when he tried to tell a joke.
- Anyone in Dawn of War when referring to the Orks. It's probably the reason they've never been a primary villain in the series: it's hard to take a situation seriously when characters talk about Nobz and Boyz (among other orky things) with a straight face.
- Space Marines in most depictions tend to fall into this category when they're not pissed off, brooding or completely Ax Crazy. Most Imperial Guard command units are either this trope or overly bombastic.
- Sakuya in Okami is so serious it isn't funny. Come Okamiden, however, her *ahem* interactions with the protagonist Chibiterasu are hard to watch with a straight face.
- Tombstone in Freedom Force vs. The Third Reich, as a result of being a Nineties Anti-Hero trapped in an homage to the Silver Age:
Alchemiss: [sarcastically] So how did you spend your sabbatical, Tombstone? Performing in musical theater? Raising puppies? |
- Quetzalcoatl also qualifies:
Quetzalcoatl [After being turned into a chicken by Green Genie] YOU DISHONOR ME AND MY ANCESTORS. |
- Gala from Legend of Legaia is generally an extremely serious fighter monk, but when he is half-forced into acting as the Straight Man in a comedy show, he is amazingly successful at making people laugh. Gala himself is shocked by this!
- Emotionless Girl Presea Combatir of Tales of Symphonia. By the sequel, her actions clearly indicate that she has regained her sense of humor, but she still speaks in a monotone making even the most ridiculous lines sound completely serious.
Visual Novels[]
- Miku in A Profile. Be careful what you tell very serious people to do, Masayuki. They might do as you ask... and then you'll have them saying 'I love you' with a deadpan face during every pause in the conversation.
- Ace Attorney series
- Miles Edgeworth. Particularly notable whenever an elderly female witness is on the stand. Edgeworth is irresistible. Calisto Yew from Investigations lamphades this by noting Edgeworth's serious demeanor makes her laugh uncontrollably. Which means that any time his demeanor is shaken (and given the kind of stuff that goes on in these games, that's at least once a case), his reaction is absolutely hilarious.
- And, to a lesser extent, Phoenix. His finger-pointing antics pale in comparison to the quirks of the Bunny Ears Lawyers he has to deal with on a daily basis.
- Shelly de Killer, gentleman assassin and ice cream eater.
- Also Edgeworth's mentor Manfred Von Karma. The man demands that his ATM PIN (0001) be entered as evidence proving his perfection. And he does it with a straight face.
- What, no Simon Blackquill?
- Mai Kawasumi in Kanon, due to her uniqueness in not rising to all of Yuichi's jokes and kidding. Just watch her at lunch or when Yuichi considers groping her just to get some kind of a reaction... and nearly getting beheaded before even starting to move.
- Ace from Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors, especially around Santa... Well until you get the safe ending. Then he's just plain terrifying.
- Though it isn't often, Nero Chaos of Tsukihime, thousand year-old uber-vampire with a body comprised of 666 demon beasts composed of pure chaos, is sometimes called into this role during side stories. His crowning moment? Participating in an involved game of tag.
Web Comics[]
- Mordecai Heller from Lackadaisy, as illustrated in this comic
- Order of the Stick
- Roy is the realistic Deadpan Snarker and Straight Man to the rest of his party's wacky hijinks. His temporary death has led to the rest of the party having various breakdowns both comedically and mentally.
- Vaarsuvius has had his/her moments, too.
V: Fascinating. Durkon, I have just now formulated a theory that encompasses both Nale's most likely method of engagement and the most suitable response on our part. |
- Referenced in Girl Genius, when an actor in the travelling Heterodyne show explains his character: "Klaus keeps his dignity, or tries to. That's what makes him funny."
- Susan from El Goonish Shive occasionally fills this role, due to her serious attitude towards pretty much everything. Due to this, she is, among other things, a favorite cuddling perch for Tedd's cat-hedgehog Jeremy. In addition, a early running gag established that, whenever she did anything overly cheerful, it was so alien to her usual personality that it couldn't be anything but hilarious (to us). After she dropped most of her burden, Nanase looked close to going "who are you and what you did to our Susan?".
- Sakido from Slightly Damned spends most of her time brooding, a pass-time which is considerably hampered by living in the same dimension as her goofy, affectionate brother Buwaro.
- Marth in Awkward Zombie. Considering that he has to share a house with the characters from the Smash-verse doesn't help.
- Shortpacked has put forward the notion that Batman is comedy gold, based solely on the fact that combining him with anything mundane produces instant laughter.
- On Twitter, the author suggested the same was true of Gendo Ikari, which was followed up with this strip.
- Gardening, beekeeping, houseworking, and dancing
- This strip.
- Schlock Mercenary has Tag, a warship AI serving Tagon's mercenaries who was built from ready templates, reacting to any situation with absolute, deadpan seriousness, while still producing a punchline. The two weeks following this strip are a good demonstration. Of course, later he began learning sense of humour because it will allow him to understand — and thus predict — other sophonts better, which obviously has a strategical value... and because Evil Laughter, if used correctly, may make him more intimidating.
- Raizel from Noblesse is an absolutely quite personification of The Stoic. Yet his unfamiliarity with modern technology is the primary source of humor early in the series.
- Jones of Gunnerkrigg Court has never so much as smiled in the entire run of the comic. Giving her a party hat is comedy gold. Topped only by her non-reaction to a pigeon dancing across her head. What makes it even better is that sometimes she clearly pokes fun at people with the same lack of expression, and with her perfect poker face it's impossible to tell where this ends.
- Sir Eglamore is too serious sometimes. Note that when "Jolly Elfsberry" made the knight play an Overprotective Dad just to pull his leg, Annie is less than amused by his prancing... until she sees what's going on (the next page) — and then immediately joins this game, barely holding laughter.
- The Adventures of Dr. McNinja is this trope applied to an entire webcomic. The main character is an Irish Ninja Doctor, who's friends with a cloned Benjamin Franklin, has a gorilla for a secretary, and has a sidekick in the form of a kid bandito with a gloriously huge mustache and his velociraptor. And it only gets weirder from there. However, the comic never seems to realize how utterly insane it is.
- Two Guys and Guy has Frank, who probably best epitomized the trope here.
Web Original[]
- The ಠ_ಠ emoticon.
- Failing that, sometimes the classic :/ qualifies too.
- Image Boards such as /tg/ have humourous mockery of Warhammer 40,000 dark and serious tone. For example, the homebrew Space Marine chapters Lazy Marines (they have Rocket-Couches) and the Silly/Clown Marines (who can fit up to three times the normal number of units inside a single vehicle ).
- As well as THE ANGRY MARINES!!! (always angry, all the time!) The only chapter that has a tank that they use to fire their marines directly into the heat of battle, and power feet, for kicking the enemies of the Emprah in the balls.
- And the Pretty Marines. This is what Warhammer 40000 would be like in Japan, gentlemen. Search your feelings, you know it to be true.
- The Whateley Universe has several such characters. Sometimes, it's Stormwolf, the leader of the Wild Pack, and the most serious, unamused, straight arrow since the invention of arrows. This plays off well against Deadpan Snarker Phase, comedian Chaka, and the rest of the protagonists in Team Kimba.
- Within Team Kimba, there's Ayla, who while not lacking a sense of humor, is not exactly the type of person who takes jokes well when he is the punchline. Ayla's status as The Comically Serious was eventually Lampshaded. See the quotes page
- Agent Washington from Red vs. Blue: Reconstruction behaves like an actual agent from a secret military in the future. Contrasts well with the whacky mishaps the main cast. The red and blue armies also do this, by tying Caboose up in the brig and putting Grif and Simmons in front of a firing squad.
- Earlier in the series, Tex also qualifies. Though to a lesser degree. Her toughness was played for action and being a badass, rather than humor.
- This is the entire point of Average Cats — it's hilarious precisely because the captions are matter-of-fact and serious. The captions also sometimes venture into Suspiciously Specific Denial. They never stop being mock-serious.
- The Protectors of the Plot Continuum universe is ruled by the Laws of Comedy, which require that any character who thinks they have dignity immediately loses it.
- Batman (of course) in I'm a Marvel And I'm a DC. And he's occasionally the Only Sane Man, to boot.
- Darth Vader and two Stormtroopers celebrate the rennovation of Disney Theme Parks' Star Tours with a trip to Disneyland.
- Lampshaded when Team Four Star did an abridged version of Dragon Ball Abridged, which covered the entire first season in 2 minutes. Tien's only line in this is "I'm the only serious character in this show. That's the joke".
- Chiaroscuro Themyst from Sinai MUCK.
Western Animation[]
- Squidward in SpongeBob SquarePants, in contrast to his two neighbors.
- Hence, this.
- Batman. Batman, Batman, Batman.[1]
- Batman often plays the Comically Serious role on Justice League.
- In the episode "Flash and Substance", Batman passes the Unfunny torch to fellow JLU member Orion.
- This strip from Shortpacked! illustrates the basic concept of the Unfunny, theorizing that Batman's grim demeanor makes him the ultimate straight-man. Case in point: Batman with babies.
- Even in the Grand Finale of Justice League Unlimited, where he threw himself hopelessly at a villain who could take punches from Superman, he was laughing at the Bat's sheer tenaciousness. Of course, in lieu of better ideas, which is what Batman normally does, what else was there to do?
- Who can forget the ending of This Little Piggy when Batman is forced to sing? And actually has a great voice!
- In "Kid Stuff" when the Justice Leaguers are de-aged into childhood Batman still keeps up his grumpy demeanor. This becomes actual unfunny at the end of the episode, when he mentions that he stopped being a child at the age of 8 — when his parents were murdered.
- A rare Batman laugh came when Harley Quinn told him how The Joker will love her for successfully putting Batman in a Death Trap. However, it was more an Evil Laugh meant to freak Harley out.
- Batman the Brave And The Bold is a subversion of Batman's usual unfunny role. Heck, in the second episode, Batman plays both straight man and funny man in the same joke. Another good episode is "Gorillas in Our Midst".
- In one Kids WB commercial, Batman was forced to sing the Jigglypuff song from Pokémon. The look on his face was priceless.
- Bill the Caveman, from the Terrible Thunder-Lizards sections of Eek! The Cat. (The fact that he was also The Chew Toy made it even funnier — "When will the hurting stop?")
- Avatar: The Last Airbender
- In the same vein as Batman, Zuko's perpetually frowning, serious demeanor leaves him wide open to many a humorous moment, partially to being paired with his foil of a jolly uncle.
- Subtly acknowledged later in the series when Sokka asks Zuko if he's happy now that he's foiled Sokka's plan, and Zuko replies, deadpan, "I'm never happy." Sokka and Zuko work together in this role almost as well as Zuko and Iroh.
- Another female example is the Emotionless Girl Mai, similarly foiled with being accompanied by a cheerful, bubbly Cloudcuckoolander.
- Sokka started out as a stern, down-to-earth, warrior-in-training, but his Comically Serious moments, as well as improvisations from his comedian voice actor, soon turned him into a goofy Plucky Comic Relief. Also see him trying to work with a bunch of out-there "nomads" in "The Cave of Two Lovers".
- Not even Azula, the Dangerously Genre Savvy Chessmaster and Magnificent Bastard, can work her way out of this one. One episode displays that Azula + social ineptitude = win.
- In The Legend of Korra, Korra's airbending teacher Tenzin takes on this role. He doesn't think that the shenanigans going on around him are at all funny, which of course means he becomes the target of endless inconveniences and humiliations.
- Raven, the Deadpan Snarker of Teen Titans, who the writers torture with such plots as: a Freaky Friday Flip with her Cloudcuckoolander team-mate Starfire, being turned into a bunny rabbit, and baby-sitting.
- Lemongrab of Adventure Time. He means serious business. He likes order a little TOO much. He can't comprehend humor. He sends everybody to the dungeon for one million years. His only (mostly visible) emotions are "angry" and "screaming." And he's HILARIOUS to watch.
- Benson from Regular Show. He HAS a sense of humor, and he's lightened up over the course of the show, but he can be very uptight, angry, and many of the things listed in the above example. Even when everything going on around him is hilarious, he'll still be red-faced and screaming. "GET BACK TO WORK OR YOU'RE FIRED!!!"
- Hank Hill, of King of the Hill. He is not Homer or Peter Griffin, but he can legitimately be funny. And he does have a sense of humor, though it’s not immediately obvious.
- Samurai Jack — Jack himself.
- Al Gore on Futurama.
"I have ridden the mighty moon worm!" |
- He's even better in his animated An Inconvenient Truth ad starring Bender:
Bender: You're in a movie? What do you play? A burnt out cop? A streetwise pimp trying to save his little brother from the dark life? |
- Cosgrove from Freakazoid!, taking everything seriously to the point of ridiculous.
- The Simpsons — Marge and Lisa Simpson. The episode "Brother From Another Series" revealed that this trope is why Sideshow Bob became Krusty the Clown's sidekick instead of his brother Cecil. As Krusty explains after a poor pie-in-the-face gag from Cecil's straightforward goofy clown audition:
Krusty: "Free comedy tip, slick: the pie gag's only funny when the sap's got dignity. (sees Bob) Like that guy. Hey, Hal, pie-job for Lord Autumnbottom there!" |
- Craig from South Park.
""Listen sir, I am not going to ruin your plans. I'll just walk away...see? Okay...now there's sparks shooting out of my eyes." |
- Also the German people, they may have terrible jokes but their completely serious blunt deliver actually make it a bit funny.
- Family Guy — Meg, Brian, and Lois Griffin are this compared to Peter. And Stewie himself at times. Since Brian can act like a normal dog, he does have a sense of humor to some extent.
- Pinky and The Brain — The Brain.
- Phineas and Ferb's Perry The Platypus: a serious crimefighter and always professional about his work, even if his Mission Control can be a Cloudcuckoolander, his Arch Enemy is a scenery-chewing joke, and he's a platypus in a fedora.
- Six in Generator Rex is this at times.
- While he’s scary overall, Gill from Kim Possible can be legitimately funny with his serious demeanor. After all, his nemesis is the comical Ron Stoppable, even if he ends up outsmarting him in his first appearance. He does have a sense of humor, but his sense of humor is bad, seeing as he’s a villain.
- Bob's Burgers — Bob Belcher and his emotionless daughter Tina. And yes, Bob is not Homer Simpson, though it wouldn’t be surprising if Homer did go to his restaurant.
- Optimus Prime has shades of this in Transformers Prime. Bulkhead explicitly mentions never seeing Optimus laugh, cry or lose his cool, but funny stuff is made funnier by his completely deadpan reaction to it. After showing a LOLcats-esque internet meme that actually got Ratchet to chuckle, Jack asked Optimus if he wanted to see something funny, Optimus replied rather bluntly "No."
- Gummy, Pinkie Pie's pet alligator, in My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic. Whatever craziness goes on around him, Gummy seems to wear the same blank expression.
- Arguably Twilight Sparkle, she often displays a no nonsense attitude to things, and is a Neat Freak and The Workaholic rolled into one. She is also extremely Adorkable and neurotic, either due to her wackier friends' antics or her Super OCD nature grating on her sanity.
- Fluttershy may count as The Quiet One variant. In episodes where she tries to be loud the best she can manage is a pitiful little squeak or something resembling Flat Joy. What lands her in this trope is the fact she seems to genuinely believe she is being loud.
Fluttershy: Too loud? |
- Keith from Voltron: Legendary Defender. "Fun" doesn't seem to be something this boy grasps very easily.
Other[]
- The stereotype of the Germans being what it is, this seems a rather inevitable result.
- Thanks to a combination of attempted clinical tone and strange or even downright silly subjects, The Other Wiki occasionally dabbles in this trope. For example, their page for Butte County High School, home of the Butte Pirates. Similarly, their 'plot' section for The Lonely Island song "Jizz In My Pants". Or their entry on "cool".
- Also observe their article on "Maternal Insults", also known to normal people as yo mamma" jokes.
- The Musashi Gundoh article also deserves special mention as the editors have solemnly agreed to preserve the article in its current broken English condition, as it remains more accurate to the show than a properly written article could ever be.
- Some of the ESRB's detailed writeups about game ratings are simply absurd, especially since they're coming from an organization devised to objectively rate games.
- They have been known to highlight features like the ability to "attach steaks to babies to attract a lion".
- Most of the unfunny comes from ESRB descriptions of sexual content, such as shower cutscenes that show "a male character's bare butt", flexed gluteus, and demon bosses with "its penis visible during the flying and fire-spewing".
- Part of the reason why animals like chickens are so funny. They lack facial expressions, which make them look serious all the time. The illusion is heightened by their prim and proper stance and mannerisms, and thus they look silly when they freak out about something.
- Cats, too. There's a reason why Cats Are Snarkers in media.
- It helps a lot that cats have such humanlike faces that people subconsciously think cats can smile, heightening the disconnect.
- Cats, too. There's a reason why Cats Are Snarkers in media.
- In response to a glaring mistake on StarWars.com's Encyclopedia, Wookieepedia, priding itself on being a source for anything and everything in Star Wars canon, created this article [dead link]. As of now, "Kamino" being a unit describing the constant height of clone troopers is technically canonical. An administrator archived this and altered the template for denoting that something was mentioned in the Encyclopedia (allowing the archival link) to facilitate the article. Brief, jocular consideration was given to creating an article on 1.87 meters the planet, but it was decided that that would have been ridiculous. Even after this is inevitably (read: eventually) rectified, a snippet on the error shall appear in the clone trooper's article.
- Most satirists tend be this way. They would say something that would be really outrageous and silly while keeping a straight face about it.
- Roger Ebert always finds this style of comedy better than Adam Sandler style clowning. See the middle of his Great Movie review of Dr. Strangelove, talking about funny hats not being funny, but not knowing your hat is funny is funny.