mimic
Explanation
The Joke
The comic presents a nature documentary-style narration about a supposed "entirely new form of mimicry" -- a plant that has evolved to look like a computer programmer. The plant mimics a programmer by "appearing humanoid and emitting occasional muttering sounds," which tricks people into "providing light from six monitors at once." The humor comes from the absurd reversal: instead of an animal or insect mimicking something in nature for survival (like a stick insect resembling a twig), this is a plant that has evolved to resemble a stereotypical programmer sitting at a desk, exploiting the artificial light from multiple computer screens as its light source for photosynthesis.
The joke also plays on the stereotype of programmers as pale, sedentary, screen-fixated individuals who mutter to themselves -- suggesting that a sufficiently convincing plant could pass for one without anyone noticing.
The Humor
The comedy works on multiple levels. First, there is the nature-documentary framing applied to an absurd premise, lending false authority to a ridiculous claim. Second, there is the implication that programmers are so immobile and uncommunicative that a plant could successfully impersonate one. The idea that the plant's evolutionary advantage is harvesting monitor light rather than sunlight is a clever inversion of how biological mimicry actually works, and it pokes fun at the modern office environment where humans spend their days bathed in screen-glow rather than sunlight.
References
- Biological mimicry is a real evolutionary strategy where organisms evolve to resemble other organisms or objects (e.g., Batesian mimicry, where a harmless species mimics a harmful one to deter predators).