It’s funny because you don’t expect kids to want there to be monsters under there beds. Typically, or rather trope-ically, children ask their parents to make sure there are no monsters under their beds and at first it would appear the same is true. However, the child and parent themselves appear ghoulish, and when it’s revealed that there is in fact a monster under the bed, ostensibly the father as it is similarly ghoulish and tells a pretty decent double-layer dad joke, the child is relieved. It’s irony! And puns. And just good Halloween vibes, which I admit aren’t inherently humorous. But I’d argue they are almost always inherently light-hearted. I give it 9/10, especially compared to a lot of the shit I see posted around here.
It’s funny because you don’t expect kids to want there to be monsters under there beds. Typically, or rather trope-ically, children ask their parents to make sure there are no monsters under their beds and at first it would appear the same is true. However, the child and parent themselves appear ghoulish, and when it’s revealed that there is in fact a monster under the bed, ostensibly the father as it is similarly ghoulish and tells a pretty decent double-layer dad joke, the child is relieved. It’s irony! And puns. And just good Halloween vibes, which I admit aren’t inherently humorous. But I’d argue they are almost always inherently light-hearted. I give it 9/10, especially compared to a lot of the shit I see posted around here.
What’s the pun?
Dead/dad
Edit: “good-bite” is a pun too
I got the good bite one. I guess the second one also explains what “hung-ee” was supposed to mean :D
Oh. Oooh. It’s “honey, I’m dead”
That’s how I readnit the first time. Now I’m thinking it’s “hi hungry, I’m dad”
Yeah, that’s the quintessential dad joke, which they spun to match the monster theme.