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Owned by Matt

They Laugh. You Win.

50 members • Free

For people who want to use humor as a tool—not a talent. For speakers, coaches, entrepreneurs, and educators and yes even aspiring comedians too.

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32 contributions to They Laugh. You Win.
App Example
So i just saw a news story and had a funny thought. So I just put this into the They Laugh. You Win app. These are just drafts. I didn't hit the "Punch it Up" button yet. The humor engine is designed to find your point of view and build the joke from there. But you see how it works. It takes your idea and turns it into something framed up and funny you can use. #ai #joke #aiapplication #comedy
App Example
1 like • 18d
Good stuff and exactly what the app is designed to do. Encourage the users to add and think of ways to maje it better. Funny stuff
0 likes • 18d
@Taylor Chew I didn't hit the magical punch up button on any of those and if you read the Coach Note that solves the AI responses. Yes I built the engine with AI, but I cloned my brain snd my process so this is unlike any AI you've ever seen or anyone has seen before and I just took the first 3 drafts to make a point. Once you start hitting all the buttons and dialing in the joke and then punch it up , what is left is pretty amazing and all of that in less thsn a minute.
Coming July, 2026
A pretty big milestone today. For the first time, this feels less like a prototype and more like a product. For the last few months, I've been focused on features. Buttons. Screens. Flows. Making sure everything worked. Recently, my focus shifted from features to functionality. Not "What can the app do?" But "How does it make the experience better?" That shift has changed everything. The app is getting smarter, cleaner, faster, and more useful with every iteration. What's most exciting to me isn't the technology. It's the impact. For nearly four decades I've been studying, performing, teaching, testing, and refining what makes people laugh and connect. Now I'm turning those lessons into something anyone can access right from their phone. The idea that someone could be working on a wedding toast, speech, social post, presentation, story, or joke and have access to that knowledge in seconds is still pretty surreal to me. There's still a lot of work to do before launch on Google Play and the App Store. But today felt like one of those moments where you stop and realize: "This is actually becoming real." And that's pretty cool. #AIStartup #SaaS #AIApplications #comedyclass #techstartup
Coming July,  2026
Most Speakers Start in the Wrong Place
One of the biggest mistakes I see speakers make is they start by asking: "What should I say?" The better question is: "Who am I saying it to?" That's why before I ever worry about slides, stories, data, jokes, or even my opening, I walk through the 5 questions in this graphic. Because great talks aren't built from content. They're built from connection. A 60-minute keynote isn't just a longer version of a 30-minute keynote. A room full of CEOs isn't the same audience as a room full of teachers. And information by itself is rarely enough. Information teaches. Stories stick. Humor amplifies. One of the things I've learned after thousands of presentations, keynote speeches, stand-up shows, workshops, and coaching sessions is this: The audience doesn't remember everything you said. They remember how you made them feel. They remember the stories. They remember the laughs. That's why the last question on the checklist might be the most important: Where are the laughs? Not because you're trying to be a comedian. Because humor creates attention. Humor creates trust. Humor creates retention. And when people are laughing, they're listening. If you're a speaker, coach, trainer, entrepreneur, auctioneer, educator, salesperson, or anyone who communicates for a living, spend less time asking: "What else should I add?" And more time asking: "How will this land?" That's where impact lives. What's the first thing you think about when building a presentation?
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Most Speakers Start in the Wrong Place
Superiority Versus Commonality Jokes
One of my rules when writing humor: If there’s a victim in the joke… and it’s not you… don't say it. Now before comedians come for me… I’m not saying superiority jokes don’t work. They absolutely work. In fact they can be amazing. But I think we laugh for two very different reasons: 1. Superiority We laugh because something looks worse than us. We feel smarter. Safer. Ahead. That can work GREAT… Especially when the target is: ✅ Yourself ✅ A product ✅ A system ✅ A shared frustration Example: Making fun of a flip phone in 2026?Easy. Making fun of PEOPLE who still use flip phones? Now the joke changed. Because maybe they can’t afford something else. Maybe they hate tech. Maybe they’re simplifying their life. Now they became the victim. But if YOU still have a flip phone? Game on. Now we laugh because we recognize something human. Which brings me to the second kind… 2. Commonality We laugh because we recognize ourselves. “That’s me.”“I do that.”“Oh man… I’ve thought that.” That kind of laughter creates connection. And connection creates trust. That’s why my favorite humor usually isn’t making fun of people. It’s showing people they’re not alone. In this video I talk about why I think this matters… …and why the biggest laugh isn’t always the best laugh. Curious where you land on this 👇
Superiority Versus Commonality Jokes
1 like • May 29
@Deitra Scott Knew you would get it ( :
Humor Isn’t Just for Comedians.
One of the biggest misconceptions about humor is that it’s only useful if you want to become a stand-up comedian. It’s not. Humor is one of the most powerful tools a speaker, entrepreneur, coach, educator, salesperson, auctioneer, or leader can learn to use. Because when people laugh: - they relax - they trust you more - they remember more - they stay engaged longer - and most importantly… they feel connected to you That connection is what moves people. Over the years I’ve seen speakers with incredible information lose a room because they sounded robotic… while other speakers with less experience completely win an audience because they knew how to use humor, timing, stories, and personality to create energy. That’s why I made this slide. Not to say “become a comedian.” But to show you that humor is a strategic advantage. And honestly… most people use humor completely backwards. They think it’s about telling jokes when really it’s about: - relatability - rhythm - emotional release - audience psychology - tension and release - and human connection That’s what we’re really studying in this community. So whether you speak on stages…run meetings…teach…sell…lead…pitch…or just want to become more engaging and memorable…you’re in the right place. And if one of these 10 points hits you… comment on it below. I’d love to know which one stands out most to you and why. Because the more you understand why humor works…the more intentional you can become using it.
Humor Isn’t Just for Comedians.
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Matt Kazam
3
33points to level up
@matt-kazam-7635
Comedian. Las Vegas Headliner. Humor coach. I’ve spent my life learning what makes people laugh—and more importantly, what makes them connect.

Active 2h ago
Joined Apr 28, 2026
Las Vegas