The first joke hits like a slap at sunrise: a man stumbling home blind drunk at 6 a.m.,
his furious wife demanding an explanation—and he just wants breakfast.
From there, it only gets wilder. Drunk ice fishermen hearing
“God” from the rink manager. Wise old men choosing
talking frogs over brides. Cowboys quitting beer, but not symbo… Continues…
What ties all these jokes together isn’t just
punchlines; it’s the small, stubborn ways people cling to who they are.
The old fisherman would rather have
a talking frog than a fleeting fantasy.
The exhausted grandfather “lost”
in the park just wants a quiet ride home.
The man who trades bodies with
his wife learns, brutally and hilariously,
that “staying home” is anything but easy. Each story pokes fun at pride,
laziness, stubbornness, or sheer cluelessness—but always with a wink, never with real cruelty.
Underneath the laughter sits a gentle truth: we’re all ridiculous, and that’s oddly comforting.
From the cowboy honoring his brothers with three beers to the beggar who refuses to fund someone else’s kids’ college,
these characters mirror us at our most human—petty, clever, selfish,
loving. You smile, you wince, you recognize yourself,
and for a moment the world feels lighter, kinder, and just foolish enough to bear.