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鈥淭he Cut鈥 is a weekly reporters notebook-type essay by an 海角破解版 content creator, reflecting on the news and on life in Northeast Ohio. What exactly does 鈥淭he Cut鈥 mean? It's a throwback to the old days of using a razor blade to cut analog tape. In radio lingo, we refer to sound bites as 鈥渃uts.鈥 So think of these behind-the-scene essays as 鈥渃uts鈥 from Ideastream's producers.

We could all stand to laugh more, and not just on Saturday night

Costumes for "The Sweeney Sisters" from Saturday Night Live. It's part of a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Exhibit celebrating 50 years of musical guests.
Josh Boose, Ideastream
Costumes for "The Sweeney Sisters" from Saturday Night Live. It's part of a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Exhibit celebrating 50 years of musical guests.

We need to laugh more.

That philosophy sometimes gets me in trouble. As someone once said, 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 laugh, we cry.鈥 I use that excuse often, especially after a one-liner that doesn't go over well. Perhaps humor is my way of coping after years of covering tragic news stories. Then again, maybe I鈥檓 just a wise guy.

A new Saturday Night Live music exhibit at The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame confirmed my love of laughter. A recent report by my colleague Kabir Bhatia on the exhibit sealed the deal on my plan to book a visit.

My partner is a huge fan of rock and heavy metal, so I took him to the Rock Hall to celebrate his birthday last weekend. As he snapped pics of Rick James鈥 bass guitar and KISS鈥 tongue-flapping album covers, I examined the costumes of SNL's Wayne and Garth and the Sweeney Sisters.

As Jan Hooks鈥 (as Candy Sweeney) rendition of 鈥淐lang, Clang, Clang went the Trolley鈥 shuffled through my head, I thought of all the chuckles SNL has brought the world over the years. A collective coping through laughter.

I preferred the show when it was simply Saturday Night Live, before people started calling it SNL. We live in a world of initials and acronyms, which cause me to cringe. Let it be noted I also still call it Kentucky Fried Chicken and Weight Watchers, though never in the same sentence.

I had the opportunity to see Saturday Night Live in person several years back. I worked for an NBC affiliate at the time and essentially had to sign a contract with Satan (said like 鈥樷, of course) to get tickets.

I dragged a friend to New York for the weekend and climbed into the steep seats at 30 Rockefeller Center to watch the show in the studio audience. Peyton Manning hosted and Carrie Underwood was the musical guest. There were some fun sketches. Even Dan Akroyd shocked the crowd and appeared in one. If you listen closely, you can catch my hearty laugh during the though I seem to be the only one who ever hears it.

I miss the days when most everything was fair game. We need to laugh. That鈥檚 what helps so many of us get through life, not just the tough times, but sometimes just to get through the day. Slices of truth through over exaggeration and parody can often ease tension. On the contrary, it seems to have caused more aggravation, scrutiny and endless analysis in the last decade.

A few days before my grandmother died, as I helped lift her into bed, I made a joke. 鈥淕randma just whispered to me and said I鈥檓 her favorite,鈥 I said aloud to other family members gathered for her vigil. Grandma just stared at me. And though cancer had ravaged her body, her eyes still said; 鈥淚nappropriate, Josh. Enough of that.鈥 I didn鈥檛 argue. But it did cut the tension during one of the most difficult times in my life. She hasn't yet haunted me from the beyond, so grandma must have not been too offended.

One could argue there鈥檚 not much to laugh at these days, and that may be true. The stories of cutbacks and job losses seem to fill our newscasts more frequently. In March, I spoke with a journalist who was fired after nearly 25 years with Voice of America. Not the stuff of punchlines. Neither is the routine task of grocery shopping. Just a trip to the store usually leaves me in pieces seeing the total. Tough choices have to be made in the checkout line. Last week I had to decide between organic oatmeal and an eyebrow pencil. I couldn't afford both. Guess which won?

I'm trying to demonstrate the importance of humor to younger generations, too. A few weeks ago, my 10-year-old nephew signed up for his school鈥檚 talent show. My sister phoned me in horror. 鈥淗e wants to do a comedy routine,鈥 she said in frantic texts, 鈥渨here is this coming from?鈥

Well, he is my nephew, I thought.

I immediately texted back about a half dozen great (well, in my mind anyway) one-liners. He picked a few and even added some of his own, but Jerry Seinfeld he was not. Not yet anyway.

鈥淭hey only laughed at a couple of them鈥, he later told me.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 good鈥, I told him. 鈥淐rinkled foreheads and long eye rolls can only make you better. Now you can use that as material for the next talent show.鈥

I stopped my pep talk before adding, "You're good enough, you're smart enough and gosh darn it, people like you," even though it's true and even though the thought of Al Franken's Stuart Smalley character still makes me laugh.

Maybe an exhibit with my nephew's SNL costumes will occupy The Rock Hall someday. Now all we've got to do is find the right song.

I'm suddenly feeling verklempt.

"The Cut" is featured in 海角破解版's weekly newsletter, The Frequency Week in Review. To get The Frequency Week in Review, The Daily Frequency or any of our newsletters, sign up on Ideastream's newsletter subscription page.

Josh Boose is associate producer for newscasts at 海角破解版.