Short Wave - Why Did The Scientist Cross The Road?...To Meet Kasha Patel!

Episode Date: May 2, 2022

When Kasha Patel decided to try out stand-up comedy, she was told to joke about what she knew. For her, that was science. Today on Short Wave, Kasha talks to host Emily Kwong about how she developed h...er sense of humor, how she infuses science into her comedy and why on Earth she analyzed 500 of her jokes. Listen to the end for bonus audio!See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Hey, Kasha, do you know what my favorite element is? There's a lot of options here. It's A-H, the element of surprise. Ah! I got one. Kasha Patel is a stand-up comedian. So the things that make me laugh versus the type of comedy that I do are a little bit different.
Starting point is 00:00:30 I love slapstick comedy. Like physical humor, like three stooges. And her favorite part of being a comedian is the joke writing. People have said my comedy, I don't know what this word means when you describe comedy, but cerebral. And I think it just means you, some of my punchlines make you think about why they're funny. kind of like a slow burn. Cerebral, because science is central to Casha's comedy. She often cracks jokes about scientists, critters,
Starting point is 00:01:11 but also things that seem impossible to make light of, like climate change. All I want to do is make people laugh. I want people to look at a situation in a new way. So today on the show, we try our best to make science comedian Casha Patel laugh. Kasha, any idea why you can't trust in Adam? Because they make everything up. Did we steal it from you?
Starting point is 00:01:37 I have heard. And in exchange, Kasha invites us into her topsy-turvy world of science stand-up. And tells us about that one time she statistically analyzed 500 of her jokes. I'm not kidding. I'm Emily Kwong, and you're listening to Shortwave, the Daily Science podcast from NPR. Kasha has done a lot of comedy. She runs science-themed shows in Washington, D.C., has traveled around the country and the world performing. She's even done stand-up in Antarctica.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Welcome to the first stand-up comedy show in Antarctica, as far as I know. Today we're going to be talking to some penguins to try to make them laugh. What was your relationship to comedy when you were growing up? Where do you think you got all this from? I have three older brothers, and I think that's honestly where it came from because they like to play jokes on me. There was this game that they would play with me called Kasha's It. It was like hide and seek, but it was called Kasha's It because Kasha was always it.
Starting point is 00:02:53 And I had to go hide and they would never come find me. How dare they? Yeah. There was another one where I just wanted to hang out with my brothers and they'd be playing video games. So they would give me a controller and they would put the cord in the back, but they wouldn't actually connect it. That's so funny. I thought that I was just really bad at video games for pretty much my entire life until I
Starting point is 00:03:24 recently learned they never plugged it in. So you have your older brothers to think for what exactly? You think. The way that I think of comedy is, obviously, it's about making someone laugh. But even before then, I think of how to approach a problem creatively. And in both of those situations, I think that my brothers found creative ways to make me feel included without infringing on their personal happiness. I hear that.
Starting point is 00:03:57 All right. So, Kasha, you were born and raised in West Virginia. You majored in chemistry at Wake Forest. And then you got your master's degree in science journalism at Boston University. Tell us a bit why that was the time in your life you thought, I think I'm going to do stand-up comedy right now, you know? I did it because I thought it would be something different and surprising for me to do. You know, I'm like this small, lanky Indian girl trying to study science and science. science journalism. And I never tried to be funny. I just didn't want to be boring. So I was just surrounded by science and you're supposed to joke about the things that you like. So I thought, oh, it makes sense to joke about science. But the problem was I was starting stand-up comedy and I was terrible. Everyone is terrible when you're starting out at something. I think it's just maybe a more apparent in stand-up comedy because you are up there and no one's laughing. And, you know, I don't think I got.
Starting point is 00:05:03 Right. You get like an immediate grade. And everyone knows that at the same time as you. Oh, yeah, yeah. The shows that I was doing were like 10 p.m. on a Tuesday with locals. There was one time in particular where I think another comedian booed me. where it was just, you know, quiet and then an audible, boo. And I just walked off stage.
Starting point is 00:05:29 I thought, okay, I guess people don't want to hear science jokes. But then when I moved to Washington, D.C., people found out that I did stand-up comedy at work. And they said, oh, do you do science-themed jokes? And they said, you would come to a show that has science-themed jokes. And they said, yes. So I put a show together and made it free. and surprisingly a lot of people came. People had a good time, and then I just kept doing it.
Starting point is 00:05:56 Is there a line of when comedy applied to science is taking it too far? Or is it all on the table for you? I'm thinking about like mental health, climate change, health disparities. These are very serious topics that we talk about in very serious ways. How do you navigate that? Yeah. I think climate change is one of the hardest things to joke about because there are so many, preconceived notions about it from both sides on Earth Day.
Starting point is 00:06:27 For Earth Day, I'll go up, you know, at a comedy club, not a science comedy show. I'll go up to a comedy show and say to the audience, like, who's excited for Earth Day? And nobody cheers. And I just respond and say, well, that's why climate change is a problem, you know, stuff like that. And they laugh at that. What do you think happens when we go through the process of finding the funny in these science topics that are otherwise such a bummer? Like, does that last with people beyond your comedy show? That's the cool part about this.
Starting point is 00:07:03 There's one study in particular that focuses on good-natured climate jokes. And these group of researchers found that the people who wrote the jokes, they were students, the people who wrote the jokes actually felt less disillusioned after they were. wrote the joke, they felt more motivated and they felt hopeful about the future. So in a way, it kind of was like a, you know, a surprising therapy where you can make jokes about this in a positive way and you feel like there's climate action that can be done. Kasha, I want to now turn to, I'm going to open up a tab, this TEDx talk that you gave in 2018 where you kind of blend comedy with scientific analysis. The talk is called the benefits of using comedy.
Starting point is 00:07:48 to explain science, and you tell the audience that you analyzed over 500 of your jokes. Let's listen to that. Here's an example of my Excel sheet, where I typed in all my jokes and I measured a bunch of different things. One of the things that I measured was how long a premise took to take and then how many seconds of laughter it produced. I saw this and I was like, Kasha, what are you doing with your free time? What is this?
Starting point is 00:08:18 What is this? You tell the crowd that you're doing this data analysis on your own jokes, and you kind of share some statistics with them. I also categorized my jokes as science or not science, and it turns out that only a quarter of my jokes are science jokes. But this small percentage actually had the biggest impact out of all of my jokes. If you looked at my jokes overall, my science jokes actually performed 40% better than my non-science jokes.
Starting point is 00:08:52 I burst out laughing when I heard this. I also felt huge relief like maybe this podcast we make has a future. But what is up with that? Why did your science jokes, which weren't that many in your set, do so well? What have you figured out since? The thing about science is... Tell me the thing about science. The thing about science is it relates to everybody.
Starting point is 00:09:17 whether people know it or not. And whether it's about your diet or an attraction to somebody, there's science and everything. So a person who says that they don't like science, I think they might not understand that science takes so many forms. And I think that, you know, maybe this past few years people have really gotten into science with COVID learning what the vaccines are and things like that.
Starting point is 00:09:43 But, you know, even before then, science is everywhere. And I think people just aren't necessarily aware that when they're eating their food or when they're taking their vitamins or anything like that, you know, when they're walking outside and they see a bird that they normally haven't seen before. I mean, that's all part of science. Yeah. You're reminding me of the fact that one of the ways you got on our radar is because someone on the team saw your talk entitled, I think it was a panel discussion, engaging your audience with poop jokes and other funny elements. we all poop, all of us, no matter our political leanings. I mean, ideally, hopefully, you know, IBS is a real problem in my family, but we all poop and we can all like laugh about that. And there's like scientific knowledge to be had in that. What role is comedy playing in those
Starting point is 00:10:35 moments when it comes to communicating science, you think? Yeah, I think it depends on the topic sometimes. So for some of these sillier jokes that might not have, have effect on people's everyday lives. I just want to show that science can be cool. It can be fun. I want science to be approachable. And I think that people think of scientists as kind of stodgy people and the stuff that they do is too difficult to understand. And I want my jokes to show, no, it's all about how you approach the subject, how you can communicate the subject. And it can be something quite enjoyable. There's a lot of potential for bringing science to the masses through comedy.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Yeah. There is a lot of potential. I've been really astounded to see how many people enjoy it and they come back and we have sold out shows. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd be making one, that would be a stand-up comedian and, too, that I'd be known for making jokes about science around the world. So that's pretty cool. What do your brothers think of all of this? They think it's cool.
Starting point is 00:11:58 They think it's cool. I just think it's the little sister you're getting the last laugh here. I think that's pretty cool. It was a pleasure talking to you. Yes, yes. Thank you so much. Pleasure talking to you, too. Today's episode was produced by Burley McCoy, edited by
Starting point is 00:12:13 Stephanie O'Neill and fact-checked by Catherine Seifer. Brian Jarbo was the audio engineer. Gizal Grayson is our senior supervising editor. Andrew Kissick is the head of the science desk. Edith Chapin and Terran Samuel are the executive editors and vice presidents of news. And Nancy Barnes is our senior vice president of news. I'm Emily Kwong. Thanks for listening to Shortwave, the Daily Science podcast from NPR.
Starting point is 00:12:38 Hi, Shortwave. This is Richard from Breckenrich, Colorado. Neutron walks into a bar, orders a drink. bartender says, for you, no charge. Hi, I'm Shelley. I'm calling you from South Jersey with a great joke. How do scientists solve the problem of bad breath? With experiments.
Starting point is 00:13:02 Hey, short waivers. I saw a group of protesters out in front of a physics lab holding pro-time travel signs. A big chance started up and the leader had a bullhorn and he yelled, what do we want? and the whole group replied, time travel. He yelled through his bullhorn, when do we want it? And the whole group yelled back, irrelevant.

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