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Rob Rinder

ByRob Rinder, Rob Rinder

Opinion

Now of all times, laughter is the medicine we really need

Just now, as the world seems to be falling apart, some people might feel it’s inappropriate to look for humour

January 22, 2024 16:02
Copy of Curb Your Enthusiasm
First look at the final series of Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO)
3 min read

One of the most delicious sounds in the world is Kirsty Young’s laugh. It’s glorious and authentic and if it was sold in shops, I’d fill my bath and splash about in it all day. It’d pop up every so often when Kirsty was the host of Desert Island Discs…and every time it did, my earholes would throb with utter joy.

One memorable occasion was in 2012 when she interviewed the late Jackie Mason. Jackie was telling her how no one would’ve eaten uncooked fish till they called it “sushi”. “It was invented,” he explained, “by two Jews who were saying to themselves, ‘how can we open a restaurant without a kitchen?’” and out pours Kirsty’s laughter like an audio hug.

Total bliss. There’s just something magical about genuine, spontaneous laughter, and it’s particularly special when it follows that wonderful, vital thing: Jewish comedy.

On the show, the two of them actually got a little into the question of what “Jewish humour” is (after all, who knew more about that than ex-rabbi Mason?). It’s always, said Jackie, “been about a guy who’s an underdog and the problems he’s facing as an alienated character”. He went on: “You’ll make fun of your rejection and persecution.”