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Revision as of 20:35, 22 August 2006
Self-referential humor relies on a subject making light of itself in some manner. For example, a comedy play that featured the story of a group of fictional thespians attempting to put on a comedy play (as is the premise of Noises Off) would be fertile ground for self-referential humor. A more concrete example would be the Stargate SG-1 episode "Wormhole X-Treme!". Another example would be Rowan Atkinson's sketch No one called Jones, in which he plays a teacher telling students with names like "Genital", "Myprick" and "Zipper" to stop making smutty, puerile jokes. Because it can be subtle, it is often used instead of more obvious humor in places that aspire to be taken seriously.
Self-referential humor is sometimes combined with breaking the fourth wall to explicitly make the reference directly to the audience, or make self-reference to an element of the medium that the characters shouldn't be aware of.
Software
Software is sometimes named with a humorous self-referencing or recursive acronym. The first, and most popular, case is the name of the GNU (GNU's Not Unix) project. Some other famous examples are WINE, which stands for Wine Is Not an Emulator; LAME, for LAME Ain't an MP3 Encoder; and PHP, for PHP Hypertext Preprocessor. An extreme example is The Hurd, where "Hurd" refers to Hird of Unix Replacing Daemons, with "Hird" in turn referring to Hurd of Interface-Representing Depth.
See also
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