Are shows with laugh tracks considered a lower form of comedy by the TV industry?

Are shows with laugh tracks considered a lower form of comedy by the TV industry? - Laughing young Indian couple watching comedy movie together at home

I personally don't like to watch shows with laugh tracks, but we do know that a crowd can be "warmed up" to laugh at almost anything, laughter is contagious, and people can thus enjoy the group laughter.

But is there any widely accepted sense inside the TV industry that putting a laugh track on a show is a cheap way to make it funnier? E.g., that it can get away with lower quality writing? That less content is required because there are constant pauses for "audience reaction?" That it demands less skill of actors? Or are laugh-track sitcoms considered equally legitimate forms of the art that can be as demanding as any other comedy?

This might seem a little opinion-based, but I'm looking for widely accepted general opinions from within the TV industry itself or thoroughly backed studies about the general impression those kinds of shows make on the TV industry. But some possible ways to approach this question a little more objectively might be:

  • Do sitcoms typically have lower budgets when they have a laugh-track?
  • Is the use of a laugh track always pitched along with a sitcom concept, or is it ever added on after the fact to cover up shortcomings? (E.g., "This script isn't very funny." "No worries, we'll add a laugh track!")
  • Do/have networks commissioned shows with laugh tracks to retain a viewer demographic that doesn't enjoy a comedy without? (E.g., "We're losing the X demographic. Add more laugh tracks to this season's lineup!")
  • Would producers be surprised to hear that a writer or actor rejected a job with a comedy solely based on the show having a laugh track?


Best Answer

I would say so. Yes, audiences can be warmed up and put into a jovial mood, but, ultimately, the laughter you'd hear with a live audience would be a reaction to something that just happened, and the degree of reaction will depend on the quality of the writing/performing.

Compare that to just inserting the same laugh sound at the end of every line, which results in hearing laughter no matter whether the line or performance merits any reaction at all.

Just like an actor that puts themselves into a state of mind where they feel emotion, and cry, and maybe that effects the reactions of other actors, is going to have a stronger audience effect because of its realism than an actor blandly reciting a line then having the camera shot cut back to them after their face is artificially moistened.

As to whether or not they get pitched with that aspect, no idea from me. There are enough actors with personal quirks or demands that I'm sure someone has refused to do a project because of a laugh track, but I can't verify that.

Along the same lines, to illustrate the connotation it carries, Chevy Chase was rightly disgusted by how the sequel, Caddyshack II, turned out and said to the director, in disgust, "call me when you've dubbed the laugh track."

Caddyshack II Trivia - IMDB




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Why is there laughing in the background of TV shows?

\u201cSweetening,\u201d or the addition of sound effects such as laughs, hollers, and other audience-produced noises to the audio track of a TV show, has been used since the 1940s to feign the appearance, or rather the sound, of an engaged and entertained response to a show's comedy.

What was the first sitcom with a laugh track?

A review of the sitcom The Hank McCune Show in a 1950 issue of Variety described the first known use of a laugh track on TV: \u201cAlthough the show is lensed on film without a studio audience, there are chuckles and yucks dubbed in.

What is the background laughter called?

A laugh track (or laughter track) is a separate soundtrack for a recorded comedy show containing the sound of audience laughter.

Are any shows still filmed in front of a live studio audience?

In May 2019, ABC found an unexpected hit with Live in Front of a Studio Audience, in which an all-star cast recreated two episodes of iconic sitcoms produced by Norman Lear. Another successful iteration followed that December, and ABC had plans to turn it into a regular event, setting the third special for May 2020.



Why Sitcoms Stopped Using Laugh Tracks - Cheddar Explains




More answers regarding are shows with laugh tracks considered a lower form of comedy by the TV industry?

Answer 2

Lower quality writing associated with network shows is more likely a factor of the high number of episodes in a given season. (Note that shows regarded as "high quality" such as on HBO, Showtime or AMC have an extremely limited number of episodes. Gary Shandling talked about this at length in regards to the Larry Sanders show, which was one of the early templates for the new breed of higher quality television programming. Essentially, because they were not bound by weekly deadlines, they could take more time to hone the material.)

Network comedy has to be what is sometimes referred to as "broad", b/c the viewership of traditional broadcast television was, and likely still is, incredibly diverse. Thus network shows generally have to cater to what is known as the "lowest common denominator".

Laugh Track shows, which are normally shot in a studio with a live audience, are almost certainly more expensive to produce than "single camera" shows, such as Louie or Curb Your Enthusiasm, for a number of production related reasons. (Both of the shows I mentioned use a large number of locations, but because they are shot in a "vérité" style, they almost certainly do not require major resources. Quentin Tarantino has discussed keeping his budgets as low as possible in order to maintain artistic freedom. Low budget production is probably the only way someone like C.K. can get away with such an unconventional sitcom format.)

Aesthetes like me consider laugh track shows to be unwatchable--they offend me on so many aesthetic levels, even when the writing is fairly strong. But this is purely subjective. My parents watch the dumbest shows imaginable and laugh their respective butts off.

With that said, laugh tracks are definitely used as a method of "cheating", making scenes appear funnier to less sophisticated viewers. (My understanding is that was a primary purpose in creating them.)

It would not surprise me if actors with a little bit of what is known as "f*ck you" money turn down opportunities to star in such shows. However, the current trend, even with broad, network comedy, seems to be away from laugh tracks.

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