Yes, audience laughs in sitcoms can be real, especially in shows filmed in front of a live studio audience. In these cases, the laughter comes from actual viewers responding to the jokes and comedic moments. However, some sitcoms use canned laughter, which is pre-recorded laughter added in post-production to enhance the comedic effect. Both methods aim to create a more engaging viewing experience.
Yes
adleast 100,000 per episode.
Amen, The Hogan Family, Head of the Class
linda is her first name cause in one of the movies she introduces herself as linda on accident. she looks at the camera man and laughs
the Jeffersons by dania,,,,,,areeba,,,,,,,,,,,anisha,,,,,,,,,,,,,,nadia
The most likely is that Most television sitcoms just are not that funny and almost no one laughs at them except for the "laugh machine".
No! its staged laughter, ;Fake laughs added on!
An actor holds his movement or next line until the laugh from the audience evoked by the previous moment subsides. Holding for laughs is important in live comedy as the next line will be lost in the laughter. That is, the audience will not hear the line. It is also important to give the audience time to laugh. If actors routinely "step on laughs" the audience will stop laughing for fear of missing something. Such an audience doesn't have nearly as much fun.
No. Television sitcoms and dramas, such as Without a Trace, do not depict the events of real life.
audience boos, no laughs, people leave
They add sitcoms all the time.
Well, honey, Seinfeld was indeed filmed in front of a live studio audience. Those laughs weren't just canned, they were the real deal. So, yes, Jerry, Elaine, George, and Kramer had a bunch of folks watching their shenanigans unfold firsthand.
Whether or not the audience believed in the existence of real witches, the witches in Macbeth are for entertainment. Nobody thought they were anything other than a group of actors. The witches may have originally been played for laughs, and certainly the addition of songs and dialogue and the character Hecate from Middleton's play The Witch made them very silly indeed.
Sitcoms can be funny if the viewer connects it to their own personal life. But some sitcoms are stupid and viewers get pleasure off of watching the characchters run around and make problems for themselves
There are many sitcoms that show example of this popular theme. Sitcoms with examples of dysfunctional families include The Simpsons, Family Guy, and the Addams from the Addams Family.
Yes, the pilot for "Too Close for Comfort" was indeed aired before a live audience in Philadelphia as part of a tryout. This approach was common for sitcoms at the time, allowing producers to gauge audience reactions before the show's official release. The feedback from the live audience helped shape the final version of the show.
I'm very sure it is. I have a question now. Over the past century how many sitcoms have had live studio audiences? And which ones? Thank you.