Why Is Everyone Throat Punching Everyone Else? (2024)

On The Today Show, an appearance by Melissa McCarthy, who starred in the comedyIdentity Thief, included this dubious assertion from the host: "You invented the throat punch," she said. "Can you tell me about this?"

That's tantalizingly close to a great question.

The throat punch, a concept somehow distinct from a punch to the throat, was defined by Urban Dictionary in 2004 as a "rapid, unexpected knucklethrust into larynx of douchebag who is pissing you off." What I would've asked the actress, who certainly didn't invent the throat punch but has done more than anyone else to mine it for laughs in anationwide forum, is why this particular comedic trope got hot.

I'd be fascinated to hear her theory of the throat punch, having just developed my own. Granted, there are maybe one or two more important subjects in the world. But if you're amenable to taking a break fromdrone strikesandmass surveillance, maybe you'll agree that the phenomenon tells us something about America.

And if you disagree and get snarky ...

* * *

My introduction to the throat punch happened in 2009.

A story was related to me about a coffee shop owner who, after feuding with a customer, posted a sign with the customer's photo warning that if he ever returned to the shop he would be met with a throat punch. The person who told me about this still cracks up when she thinks of it."Watch out," I told her years after I first heard the story, "or you might get throat punched." She couldn't stop laughing.

The anecdote made me laugh when I first heard it too. It's difficult to explain just why. It wouldn't be funny to see a literal punch to a throat delivered in anger. Quite the contrary. The humor was partly rooted in the unexpected (forgive me) punch line, the atypically ordered words, and of course the apparent hyperbole.How mad are you? So mad I could throat punch him!I can envision a throat punch that would be upsetting to see, or even deadly to the person receiving it, but what I envisioned when I first heard the term was more like this:

* * *

Laughing at the infliction of physical pain is nothing new.

The Three Stooges were subjected to eye-pokes and slaps. Wily Coyote was perpetually dropped from on high. Sylvester was pummeled by a housewife's broom.And "object to the groin" became such a trope that satirical takes on it are classic:

Homer is actually right that the shot to the groin works on several levels. Every man in the audience can empathize, having felt that singular pain at some point. Anything involving private parts is just funnier. And even women know that part of the anatomy is superlatively sensitive. No surprise that in a web era more coarse than the America's Funniest Home Videos era that preceded it, "penis punch" and "cockpunch" came into the lexicon, tapping the same vein of humor. Its darkest iteration: We laughed (even as half of us cringed) atLorena Bobbitt jokes.

"Throat punch" is a less obvious trope. The throat is not a private part. Few of us have been struck there–who knows what it even feels like?

Why Is Everyone Throat Punching Everyone Else? (1)

Hollywood screenwriters doubtless chose it in part because it's fresher and less expected than the football to the groin or kick to the crotch. Still, how did it percolate up in the culture enough to be plucked for mass entertainment as the main gag in a Hollywood film? And to play a role in various television shows and YouTube gag videos as well?

I'll tell you my theory.

Social media has brought about a world where it's never been easier or more popular to broadcast angst, mockery, and petty annoyances. See the rise of #fail and #FML. And while people have always sought to vent their frustrations and signal superiority, thenoise and volume of stuff on the web encourages everyone to do so in ever more comical, over-the-top, cartoonish ways.

Little wonder that the throat punch came along.

For pure humor, Homer is right: A football to the groin wins every time. But a deliberate kick to the balls? Too much. That's something reserved for an attacker or a cheating ex. As a trope, it isn't suited to the expression of fleeting, semi-ironic disdain.It is too raw. It betrays investment in the object of one's disdain.

While less sensitive and thus less funny than the private parts, the throat is still a sensitive body part that is also reasonably neutral—that is, it's gender neutral, and it isn't freighted with sexual or cultural overtones. If what you're seeking is a cooly detached zing leavened by humor, invoking the throat punch is just the thing. There's no bettervehicle for semi-ironic exclamations of faux-violence.To see what I mean, search "throat punch" on Twitter, where the prevalence of the trope helped spur me to write about it. Behold the variety of its uses!

As part of the zeitgeist:

Trick or Throat Punch!

— FrankenBob Monster (@Bob_Heller) October 29, 2013

As emphasis in a very pregnant woman's warning to avoid crossing her:

If anyone annoys me while having these contractions I WILL throat punch them!! So grumpy right now! #nosleep #horriblepains

— Tasha Rupard (@rupard2013) November 1, 2013

To signal annoyed disdain for a pop-culture phenomenon:

Singing Blurred Lines in front of me is an invitation to throat punch you.

— Moosstaccha (@SocialustGal13) October 25, 2013

As a way to express solidarity with an older code as a newer one emerges:

The UAV pilot who claims 1600 kills. Your grandpa would throat punch him if he walked into the local VFW. http://t.co/ij0NUGHDiW

— Doctrine Man (@Doctrine_Man) October 25, 2013

To vent and commiserate about domestic frustrations:

H: I put all the dirty clothes in the laundry room M: Um ok H: Just saying they're out of the suitcase, ready to be washed M: *throat punch*

— Jules.. Just Jules (@Scuba_Jules) October 17, 2013

As a new expression of the old complaints about work and coworkers:

I would gladly give up Casual Friday for Throat Punch a Coworker Day.

— The Robfather™ (@thatUPSdude) October 10, 2013

To express the degree of bottled up tension you're feeling:

I made it an entire day & a half without coffee. I'm ready to throat punch a baby woodland creature at this point.

— kellydoll☣ (@kellybdoll) October 7, 2013

In place of "Don't you just hate it when [thing most people hate] ..."

If my coworker begins another sentence with "It's not my job..." I'm going to burst trough the wall Kool Aid man style and throat punch her.

— Bizarro Mark (@Bizarro_Mark) September 9, 2013

As a suggested response to people who rub pregnant bellies or facsimiles thereof:

Make Friday fun, strap on a pregnancy belly prosthetic then throat punch people who try to rub it.

— The Miller's Tale (@JaneVenter) June 28, 2013

As jocular self-deprecation:

I never know what to do with my arms when I'm dancing so everyone gets a throat punch.

— Ceej (@ceejoyner) May 18, 2013

To describe the feeling of wanting to perpetrate violence on someone for their poor fashion choices:

The lady at the vet was kind enough to match her eyeshadow to her royal purple scrubs. I was kind enough not to throat punch her for it.

— inappropriate mom (@nicfit75) April 11, 2013

To express disdain for New Age culture:

What does namaste mean? And why does it make me want to throat punch?

— Jennifer Hall (@TheJenniferHall) March 11, 2013

To warn pranksters not to make you so fearful that you'll hurt them badly:

I have an insane fear of clowns. If you think it's funny to dress up like one & scare me...I will kill you with a throat punch. No joke

— Cheetara (@Nyx422) November 27, 2012

To commit to change with a personal incentive:

If I ever say whatevs again I'm going to throat punch myself.

— Drunk N Naughty (@drunkNnaughty) August 17, 2012

To express cultural loyalties:

If you say "let's have a barbecue today" and then suggest going to Burger King, better block your gizzard from the incoming throat punch.

— Billy Wipe Lightly (@B_poling82) July 25, 2012

To highlight the extraordinary degree to which you like chips with cheese melted on top:

I would totally throat punch a child if I feel he is standing in between me and nachos.

— SuckMahDick (@RadOrDie) June 28, 2012

There will always be comedic tropes that reside in the spacewhere slapstick humor at pain meets the dark desire to inflict it. The throat punch is the iteration for this cultural moment. Of course, I've put myself in figurative jeopardy by writing this article, which can only end in a subset of readers Tweeting things like, "Trying to explain jokes: unfunny. Trying to explain throat punches? Throat punched."

And that's fine.I'd much prefer it to a swift kick in the balls.

Why Is Everyone Throat Punching Everyone Else? (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Nathanael Baumbach

Last Updated:

Views: 6175

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanael Baumbach

Birthday: 1998-12-02

Address: Apt. 829 751 Glover View, West Orlando, IN 22436

Phone: +901025288581

Job: Internal IT Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Motor sports, Flying, Skiing, Hooping, Lego building, Ice skating

Introduction: My name is Nathanael Baumbach, I am a fantastic, nice, victorious, brave, healthy, cute, glorious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.