the-netherworld
Explanation
The Joke
A mysterious figure presents a recording device from "the year 1817," claiming no one knows where it came from. Some say it contains sounds "from the Netherworld." The scene is set up like a classic horror or occult mystery -- a spooky artifact with potentially supernatural origins. But when someone plays it, instead of hearing terrifying demonic voices, the listeners react with casual excitement: "Hey! Wanna record ourselves doing a prank?" and "I'll get Franklin to crank the dictaphone!" The "sounds from the Netherworld" turn out to be nothing more than a group of friends goofing around with an early recording device.
The Humor
The comic subverts the classic horror trope of the "mysterious ancient recording that contains evil voices." The elaborate buildup -- the old artifact, the unknown origin, the ominous mention of the Netherworld -- creates an expectation of something terrifying. Instead, the recording contains the most mundane and relatable content imaginable: people excited about new technology and immediately using it for pranks. The joke suggests that if people in the early 1800s had access to recording devices, they would have behaved exactly like people today with smartphones -- making silly content. The mention of "Franklin" and the "dictaphone" grounds the humor in a specific historical period while emphasizing the timelessness of human goofiness.