The most "readily available jokes" turn out to be elephant in the fridge/animal logic jokes. Then comes the Why did the chicken cross the road? then Dad jokes/knock-knock/pun jokes, then math/science, and then French military/cowardice.
I've never heard of French military/cowardice jokes. I went and found a few and they aren't funny. The series of jokes started because of their WWII defeat. They were revitalized in the U.S after France refused to join the Iraq invasion. It seems to me that AI has gone askew on this. A bad moment for AI. And we are in pursuit of laughter, so let's try the elephant in the fridge jokes. I see a site that has combined them with mathematician/science etc jokes:
MATHEMATICIANS hunt elephants by going to Africa, throwing out everything that is not an elephant, and catching one of whatever is left.
EXPERIENCED MATHEMATICIANS will attempt to prove the existence of at least one unique elephant before proceeding to step 1 as a subordinate exercise.
PROFESSORS OF MATHEMATICS will prove the existence of at least one unique elephant and then leave the detection and capture of an actual elephant as an exercise for their graduate students.
COMPUTER SCIENTISTS hunt elephants by exercising Algorithm A:
Go to Africa.
Start at the Cape of Good Hope.
Work northward in an orderly manner, traversing the continent alternately east and west.
During each traverse pass,
Catch each animal seen.
Compare each animal caught to a known elephant.
Stop when a match is detected.
EXPERIENCED COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS modify Algorithm A by placing a known elephant in Cairo to ensure that the algorithm will terminate.
ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMERS prefer to execute Algorithm A on their hands and knees.
HARDWARE ENGINEERS hunt elephants by going to Africa, catching gray animals at random, and stopping when any one of them weighs within plus or minus 15 percent of any previously observed elephant.
ECONOMISTS don't hunt elephants, but they believe that if elephants are paid enough, they will hunt themselves.
STATISTICIANS hunt the first animal they see N times and call it an elephant.
CONSULTANTS don't hunt elephants, and many have never hunted anything at all, but they can be hired by the hour to advise those people who do.
OPERATIONS RESEARCH CONSULTANTS can also measure the correlation of hat size and bullet color to the efficiency of elephant-hunting strategies, if someone else will only identify the elephants.
This morning's Globe and Mail front page headline today says that on Easter: Trump issues profane threat to Iran over blocked strait.
The New York Times say this: In an expletive-filled social media post, Mr. Trump said Iran should open the Strait of Hormuz or he will bomb bridges and power plants.
What about the Washington Post? Trump threatens Iran with "Hell" over Strait of Hormuz in profane post. Another quote says: "open the Fuckin/Strait, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH".
NPR says: Trump unleashes curse-filled social media rant at Iran.
I then went over to the BBC PIDGIN English site - but also no news of the profanity there. BBC Normal has several YouTube articles on it.
We Canadians haven't grown as used to profanity and hyperbole from leaders. There are articles that have gone on for years about Trumpian profanities and Americans in the crowds cheer it on. It must be our British heritage, as we don't seem to be going down that path. I guess it has been around a while as there are a lot of jAmerican-style jokes on the subject of profanity itself:
A pastor’s wife walks into a butcher shop. She sees the most perfect looking cut of meat in the display case and asks the butcher what kind of meat it is. “That’s Dam Ham,” he replies “I bet your PARDON?!” the lady says, “I am a good Christian woman, and I would kindly ask you not to use that kind of language.” The butcher explains, “Oh no ma’am, I’m not using profanity. Dam Ham is what we call the especially delicious filets we get from the big trout caught down by the dam.” The woman apologizes for the misunderstanding, buys the filet, and goes home.
Later that evening, her husband comes home from work and asks, “What is that Heavenly smell?” “Thats Dam Ham,” she replies. “Honey! What would the congregation think if they knew their pastor’s wife was speaking in such a way?” “Oh no honey, I would never!” She responds “They call it Dam Ham because it’s a special filet from one of the big trout caught down by the dam.” She finishes dinner and they sit down at the table with their two beautiful children. They join hands and say grace. The husband carves the meat, takes some for himself, then passes the plate to his son. After taking his first bite, the husband says, “Honey, you’ve really outdone yourself. This Dam Ham is delicious!
“Right on, Dad!” The son says “Now could you pass the fucking potatoes?”
Easter is so important to the Roman Catholic Church and similar Western religious organizations. There were services every day during last week's Holy Week. I wonder if the Easter message has changed through the ages. That's a few thousand years for evolution. So I cracked the AI Encyclopedia spine to find out.
Early Christian Era - 1st to 4th century - astonishment and triumph: He is not here: He is risen - Luke. The Paschal Greeting of He is risen, the resurrection as a victory over death, linked to baptism, and the dyeing of eggs red to represent the blood of Christ.
Medieval Period - 5th - 15th centuries - Christ's victor is now over the hellmouth conquering death and Satan, Lenten fasting, and a ritual of light and dark with services held in darkness with one candle.
Early Modern Period - 16th - 18th centuries - Luck of Easter and new passover with Christ the Paschal Lamb sacrificed to bring new life...
19th Century - present - Rebirth and renewal - Spring, new geinnings, older traditions like the Easter Bunny (fertility) and the Easter Lily (purity). Global hope - peace, resurrection hope and person fresh starts for believers, and cultural expressions like egg hunts symbolizing the search for the empty tomb.
Easter messages are not a major deal the way Christmas messages are. Christmas is family, hope, charity, joy, goodwill, whereas Easter is resurrection, renewal, triumph and political peace.So the big messenger should be the Pope. And that was the case this year - he gave an Urbi et Orbi - a pope's most solemn apostolic blessing. These are reserved for special times.
The next most religious message is Donald Trump's wavy greeting 'Happy Easter to all, may God bless you, may God bless the United States of America.' This is backed up by the White House website message that looks to be written by a Christian Evangelist. Other leaders had little to say. King Charles has no Easter message this year so had to give in with a social media post. Mark Carney did not release a specific Easter Message.
My big surprise, along the way, was this website - BBC News PIDGIN HERE. The title is Christmas messages from leaders around di world and subheadline:
As millions of pipo around di world dey celebrate Christmas day wit dia families and friends, leaders around di world don drop messages. See some of di messages from ogbonge leaders across di world.
These are not typos - this turns out to be a BBC news service in West African Pidgin English that was launched in 2017. It is a real site, rather than a parody. Go check it out.
This being the chocolate holiday of the year, news organizations of any sort are exposing the sad demise of chocolate bars into chocolate candy. I remember when cheese got changed into cheese food, and those thin slices showed up in the grocery store in the 1950s. I remember knowing as a child that they didn't taste good.
This chocolate demise is attributed to chocolate crops in crises due to climate change. The price of chocolate spiked at an all-time high in 2024. It is valued per tonne, so it was over US $12,000 a tonne in 2024, up 400% - $3,300 in 2023. The price has gone down through most of 2025, but the crises hasn't gone away. Drought in West Africa and crop disease are the two factors that are here to stay. Seventy percent of the world's cocoa is grown in West Africa.
Reese's Peanut Butter Cups have changed so much that the Reese grandson now refuses to eat them - after having spent a lifetime consuming a butter cup a day. He is showcased in all of the articles on chocolate's flavour demise.
It turns out that the Skylon Tower was financed by Reese's Chocolate owner C.Richard Reese, son of the original inventor. There's the idea that the tower's observation deck was modelled to look like a peanut butter cup.
Gerry and I worked at the /Skylon Tower in 1970. There was a Reese's connection with one of the relatives running the Canadian Gift Shop where I worked. I remember that all the candy was stored in a locked wire cage in the storage room - and that there were a lot of Reese's Chocolate Cups on the shelves then. It makes me think chocolate has been extraordinarily popular since forever.
I found archival footage of Niagara Falls and the Skylon Tower from the 1970s HERE.
This Easter display at the Niagara Falls Floral Showcase Greenhouse is from 2011. They have never had a display like this again.
That is the reason I read the news online and in the newspaper every day. There is much to keep up with.
Today's headline holds the expression "word salad" - it means a confused, incoherent mixture of random words and phrases that lack meaningful connection. It was an accusation headline - someone knowingly committing word salad talk.
The most recent accusations are pointed to American politicians. Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are the two most quoted. In the U.K. Boris Johnson was known for producing "complete word salad." The British are very sensitive to political nonsense-speak and accuse Keir Starmer of the same. Emmanuel Macron is known for long, philosophical, and complex sentence structures that are described as word salad - avoiding clear positioning during crises. Mostly, though, European leaders are accused or evasiveness.
The expression originated from German or French psychiatrists in the late 19th century who were describing incoherent, nonsensical speech associated with schizophrenia, dementia or brain injury. It was a technical psychiatric term.
Today it is used to describe what is considered intentionally vague, incoherent, or nonsensical speech - and generally applies to politicians or public figures.
And why not have a word salad daily puzzle? What makes it ironic is that it says it will keep your brain sharp and focused.
Or we could go for some word salad jokes each day - I guess maybe not every day when you look at this one - a Garfield Joke:
"Why do they call it oven, when you of in the cold food of out hot eat the food?"
And the explanation below the joke: Explain Bear: Listen here, you bottom-tier thinker. This is a classic word-salad meme. It puns "oven" with "of in" and then descends into pure gibberish. You're probably still trying to find the verb in this sentence, but your brain is currently buffering. It's supposed to make no sense.
So what would a word salad picture look like? I came upon this - one of my grunge pictures. The shapes are known and familiar, and the placement has a nice elegance to it. But then all around this order is a mess of scratches, peeling paint, and decay. I think if we placed some letters/words in the circle, this would make an excellet word salad picture. I'll get to work with a good quote.