2015-02-26
Explanation
The Joke
Two people — apparently the last survivors of some apocalypse — stand in a ruined landscape. The man says "We're the only ones left alive. You know what we have to do." The woman responds with "Repopulate the Earth." The man objects: "Are you insane? All of the doctors are dead. All the hospitals are bombed out."
The woman counters that the human race will die out otherwise, but the man takes a darkly rational stance: "If I die in childbirth — from my perspective, it's the end anyway. What does the future matter to me if I'm dead?" The woman challenges his logic: "Where's your sense of duty? Wouldn't you want your legacy to continue?" He then pivots to a practical objection: "Imagine trying to raise a child without cartoons." They both agree: "You know, humans had a good run."
The Humor
The comic subverts the classic post-apocalyptic trope where the last surviving man and woman must repopulate the Earth. Instead of a romantic or heroic response, the man raises increasingly valid (and mundane) practical objections to the plan. The first reversal is that the man is the one worried about dying in childbirth — a subtle joke that subverts the gendered assumption of who would bear the children, or perhaps just highlighting his general anxiety. The escalation from serious concerns (no medical infrastructure) to philosophical ones (subjective mortality) to utterly trivial ones (no cartoons for the kid) creates a comedic arc that ends with both characters deciding humanity's extinction is an acceptable outcome rather than dealing with the hassle of rebuilding civilization.