Why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks?

Why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks? - Laughing young Indian couple watching comedy movie together at home

In the early days of TV people used to go to theaters and enjoy vaudeville where there was a live audience. TV programs in the early days were mostly recorded in front of a live audience so the reactions and laughter were genuine.

Then at some point TV producers decided to "sweeten" comedy shows because people were not laughing at the right places so they added artificial laugh tracks. I was lucky enough to get a DVD boxed set of MASH without the laugh track and the show is totally different. The harsh reality of war was not hidden and the contrast of laughter was set against the war theme made the show much more interesting.

Other shows in recent years like "My name is Earl" were brilliant and they have no laugh track. In fact a lot of shows are not even recorded in front of a live audience anymore and they still ADD a laugh track.

What is the reasoning behind adding a laugh track when we are in a living room, not in an audience, we ALL know the laugh track is fake and we don't need to be told when to laugh.

Yet they still add it?

Why?



Best Answer

Because hearing laughter when watching comic shows makes people inclined to regard them as funnier than they would normally. Really. Even when they are intelligent. Even when they know it's fake, canned laughter. I know this is hard to believe, but behavioural psychologists have run the tests, and the results are unambiguous: laugh tracks work, no matter how informed or intelligent the audience is. (Only have pop-sci books as sources for that, ask on Cognitive Science if you want the primary sources.)

As for why some shows do it and others don't: fundamentally, people who find a program funnier are more likely to keep watching, ergo more ad dollars. The downside is that some people might find the laugh track offensive and not watch out of spite. Clearly different producers have different expectations of which effect will predominate, which leads to different choices; the production cost of adding laugh tracks is rather small, and probably not decisive.




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Why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks? - Cheerful wife with bindi on forehead wearing plaid tunic with white trousers using TV remote control for channel switching while lying on bed with laughing Sikh husband in turban with stylish beard and twisted mustache
Why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks? - Happy young Indian couple laughing and cuddling while relaxing on couch
Why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks? - Positive married couple spending time together and watching movie



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 sitcoms still filmed in front of 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 Do TV Shows Use Laugh Tracks?




More answers regarding why do TV comedy programs have laugh tracks?

Answer 2

Graham Lineham, sitcom writer behind several successful Irish and British sitcoms, wrote an article on this.

This seems the most important point (my bold):

Audience laughter, when it's deserved, acts as a sort of fairy dust that makes funny moments not just funny, but joyous. It also takes the edge off moments that otherwise might tip over into tragedy; imagine Basil Fawlty whacking his car with a branch or goosestepping around a hotel lobby to complete silence and you're imagining not a comedy, but a fairly grim account of mental collapse.

It's a stylistic thing that changes the tone of a scene. As the asker says, without laughter, MASH is quite a grim account of some of the horrors of war, which is interesting, but not what the creators wanted.

Contrast it with modern sitcoms that don't have laughter, such as The Office, Peep Show, Arrested Development, Curb Your Enthusiasm etc - these tend to be more like comedy-dramas with humour frequently based on tension, where laughter would kill the drama and the tension. Comedies that do choose to add laughter tend to be comedies that are lighter, sillier, or more knowingly over-the-top (especially Lineham's).


It's worth noting that Lineham's sitcoms, and I believe most sitcoms with a laugh track, are filmed in front of a live audience - the laughter is a genuine audience reaction that the actors can hear and are responding to, it's not "canned laughter" added in post-production. It's also usually taken from the first take, since that's usually the biggest and most genuine laugh.

He also gives some reasons that are specific to live audiences:

  • it pushes me to make the show funnier... Under the threat of such an unpredictable group of people, any line that doesn't get a laugh stands out like an old guy at a party.

  • There are some actors who come alive in front of a crowd, and if you've cast it right, there's an energy between cast and audience

A lot of the comic timing of sitcom actors in sitcoms filmed in front of a live audience is based on responding to the audience, which is part of the reason why it can be so painful to watch these when the audio track from the mics pointed at the audience is turned off: the actors are reacting to something that isn't there.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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