It's easy to laugh at etiquette, but in a hundred years, our children's grandchildren will almost certainly be laughing at us.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Adults will not necessarily laugh at the same thing as their children.
I'm the youngest in my family, and everyone is very funny, and I was always trying to keep up with them. I just loved making people laugh.
I know how to make adults laugh pretty well. I don't know if kids think I'm that funny.
Laughter crosses boundaries of class and age... Humour is universal.
Growing up doing those Kiwanis Clubs, doing those Cub Scout banquets, doing those church shows, I learned to find that sensibility that most people could laugh at - that all ages and demographics could laugh at.
Laughing a lot is really good for you, embracing your children's future and embracing your grandchildren, and not having regrets and not being bitter and not being angry.
I have the humor of a 9-year-old boy, and sometimes I've had laughing fits on-air.
If I were given the opportunity to present a gift to the next generation, it would be the ability for each individual to learn to laugh at himself.
I think there should be laughs in everything. Sometimes, it's a slammed door, a pie in the face or just a recognition of our frailties.
In polite society one laughs at all the jokes, including the ones one has heard before.