Of course, all Radio Yerevan jokes are accepted, but please highlight your original ones. What I'm proposing is a contest where each can submit original jokes based on Radio Yerevan style (not necessarily about the Soviet Union or related themes). Often the first step was affirming with "In principle yes" and then adding an explanation after the famous "but". A further problem, or asset, with these jokes is that as many were passed from ear to mouth, they changed accordingly over time. Once established, this "headline" became a standard format of many Q&A jokes, and it is often difficult to recognize what was the original format of the joke. These jokes of Q&A type are allegedly from the Question & Answer series of the Armenian Radio. Said radio was just a representation of Communist propaganda, and these jokes were especially popular in the Communist. Radio Yerevan was the most famous type of joke in the "Second World" that is, in the communist nations of Eastern Europe.įor a definition of such jokes, one can use wikipedia:
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