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J redding's avatar

"I thought you'd killed yourself" seems too simple and common of a phrase for anyone to have any ethical kind of claim over it. I personally can't see how it would be unethical to any previous writer to include this phrase in every single script. The only disservice you'd be doing is to yourself and the audience..

I respect comics and it's a shame it's such a tough job, but I'm sorry, this only confirms my suspicion that the comedy world's standards for theft and originality are untenably high.

"That’s not joke theft, but it gets people used to the idea that comedy doesn’t really need to be your own idea." We've been repeating knock-knock jokes and street jokes since the beginning of time. So the idea is pretty ingrained in the public consciousness. I just can't see why it's so unethical to rephrase a joke and make it your own. We tolerate this in music, the visual arts, fantasy fiction. I just can't understand why comedy needs to have such a stricter standard.

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Ian Michael Lessard's avatar

The first episode of the ill-fated Disney+ series Willow features an entire scene/joke ripped from Young Guns. The whole crew rides their horses off a cliff while "Thraxos Boorman" repeatedly screams a single word in his own language. Soon after, at the bottom of said cliff one of the companions asks "what does that word mean?" Boorman replies "It means stop." The whole bit was lifted from a hugely popular cowboy movie from 1988. When I watched that first episode back in '22 the show was instantly dead for me, and I was not a bit surprised when it was cancelled after one season. Plagiarism is indeed a sure sign of lack of talent.

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