Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 15
Study of 32,000 Dad Jokes Links Puns to Stronger Father-Child Bonds
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 15

Study of 32,000 Dad Jokes Links Puns to Stronger Father-Child Bonds

1 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 15

Summary

  • Paul Silvia’s new analysis suggests dad jokes do more than provoke groans: shared, lighthearted humor may help fathers bond with children and support well-being.
  • More than 32,000 jokes from Reddit’s r/dadjokes pointed to three recurring ingredients in the strongest examples—puns, literalization and pedantic misdirection—with question-and-answer formats scoring especially well.
  • Survey responses also found people connected more with jokes featuring family characters, while topics such as nature, health care and money landed better than politics, religion and war.
  • Humor researchers say the effect goes beyond laughter, helping reduce stress, lift mood and encourage cognitive reframing; dad jokes may add a social bonding element that becomes part of a child’s long-term emotional fabric.

Insights

Do 'mom jokes' exist, and how might they differ from dad jokes in strengthening family bonds?
When do dad jokes stop being a bonding tool and start becoming a communication barrier?