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  2. Sep 26, 2016 · When Douglass first ‘invented’ the laugh track in 1950, it was intended to help the audience watch, understand and feel comfortable with a relatively new medium. TV comedies adopted canned...

  3. Apr 16, 2020 · The term “canned laughter” is often attributed to American sound engineer Charley Douglass who devised the technique in the late 50s.

    • Charlie Watts
  4. Nov 5, 2021 · Canned laughter was born in the days of radio, helped along in no small part when Bing Crosby discovered that sound engineering meant he could pre-record shows and still sound like he was ...

    • chris@mashable.com
  5. Apr 16, 2020 · Sophie Scott, a cognitive neuroscientist, explains that “adding laughter to a joke, increases the humour value, no matter how funny or unfunny the joke is”. Scott and her researchers created an...

  6. Sep 26, 2016 · The history of ‘the laugh track’ says much about what the makers of television thought of their audiences, writes Jennifer Keishin Armstrong.

  7. Feb 25, 2022 · In 1999, Time magazine called the laugh track, “one of the hundred worst ideas of the twentieth century.”. Recorded or “canned” laughter has been used to “sweeten” the sound tracks of television situation comedies since 1950.

  8. Jul 20, 2010 · Who invented the canned-laughter machine? Actually, its official name is the Laff Box, and it was invented by a man named Charles Rolland Douglass. He served in World War II, and when he returned to civilian life, he worked as a broadcast engineer at CBS.

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