New
artificial intelligence chatbot generates writing,
but is it punny?
BY
BEN EISEN
BROOKLYN—I
heard the MC call my name and felt my legs carry
me toward the stage. It was time to enter the
Punderdome.
I’d
never competed in a pun contest, much less in
front of hundreds of people at an event considered
the Roman Colosseum of punditry. My stage presence
could be described as lacking. I had done
basically no preparation.
I did, however, have one thing going for me: I was
actually a robot. Or, rather, its assistant.
ChatGPT,
the trendy new artificial intelligence robot, had
generated all of my puns. It’s a crazy good
chatbot. So good, in fact, that it has some folks
calling this the end of the human race as we know
it.
The
chatbot can write an essay on Proust in seconds.
Want
a
limerick about the Cold War? It can rhyme
“tensions ran high” with “nuclear sky.” Could it
match the wit of a human pun champion? I was about
to find out at Punderdome, a pun contest that
draws big crowds to a venue in Brooklyn.
A
skillful pun competition between two people sounds
more like a conversation with a heaping dose of
puns about a topic slipped in. In one You-Tube
video I watched the night before the event, two
punners faced off on the topic of dog breeds. “I
found that some instruments you can carry with you
everywhere. But a bass? Set it down,” one said
(basset, get it?). The other shot back: “Does that
bass play a sharp A?” (Shar Pei, obviously.)
I
asked the chatbot for help. “Tell me a pun,” I
typed in.
“Why was the math book sad? Because it had too
many problems,” it answered. More of a dad joke
than a pun, I thought. It was the first of many
times the bot would spit out that answer.
Before
Allison Fisher started competing at
Punderdome under the name Rhyme & Punishment
five years ago, she went to a coffee shop with a
friend. They went back and forth
practicing two-minute monologues the way they’re
done in the show. She won three times. “It’s
really all about noodling around the ideas in your
head,” said Ms. Fisher, a software engineer.
“After thinking for 15 seconds orzo, I’ll take a
penne to paper.