50 Photos Of People Learning Things In The Funniest Way Possible
Here are 50 hilarious lessons people learned by just living their lives:
1.This poor music fan learned that they should not do things — like use their AirPods — while sleep deprived:
2.This grandpa had his kids over when he learned that his smart TV keeps a record of his previous searches:
3.And this cat owner learned that kitties and blinds don't mix:
4.These school girls learned there is a second purpose for traffic cones:
Related:
5.This grandma is learning how to use email (sort of):
6.And this worker at Fox learned that it's best to reread your work before putting graphics onscreen:
7.This person learned that making their email address their business name (Mucky Pups) + their city name (Exmouth) wasn't a good idea:
8.This restaurant worker learned the importance of proofreading:
9.And these parents learned what happens when you let your teenage twins decorate their own birthday cake:
10.This person learning English took a course that was VERY thorough:
11.This traveler learned the hard (and gross) way they really should have scanned down to the English translation:
12.And this linguist learned how to say "Hi!" in Mandarin:
13.This wife learned never to leave her phone open around her husband:
14.This guy is still learning how to get over his ex:
15.And this mom learned that maybe, just maybe, she is on her phone too much:
Related:
16.This person learned in a very painful way what these wipes are — and aren't — for:
17.Tourists who visit this place learn there is a good reason two-story outhouses never caught on:
18.And this person learned how to perpendicular park, LOL:
19.This person learned that this fly swatter could give visitors to their home the wrong idea about their sex life:
20.This person learned that a towel and some makeup were enough to anthropomorphize their washing machine:
21.And this sign writer learned that phrasing is important:
22.This mom found these drawings by her 4-year-old and learned it might be time to stop getting dressed in front of her kid, LOL:
23.This city learned that going with the lowest bidder isn't always a good idea:
24.And this person learned firsthand the old saying, "Life will lead you exactly where you should be":
Related:
25.This person had an epiphany that they really should think through their permanent life choices more:
26.This person learned that some fast-food workers are barely paying attention (I imagine they said something like, "Can I get a burger with a coconut shake and some ranch?"):
27.And this person learned why you should NEVER wash a wool sweater in hot water:
28.This traveler saw this sign and realized that some people urinate in cooler ways than the rest of us:
29.This kid learned that if you're going to forge a fake note from your teacher, you gotta make it look more real than this:
30.And the person who sent out this email is probably learning the same lesson:
31.This woman learned that lily pads aren't as strong as they look:
32.This fifth-grader learned how to write a three-paragraph letter in the funniest/laziest way possible:
It reads:
Dear [Name],
I am [Name], and I'm in fifth grade. I have a school project where I have to choose a state, and I picked Missouri! For this project, I need to send letters to ten places in Missouri, so if you're reading this, consider yourself one of the lucky ones!
It was really hard to pick which places to send letters to because all the places are so cool! There are three parts to this project: one is sending letters, another is collecting things from the places, and the last part is making a brochure with the information I gather. You're probably thinking, "Wow, that's a lot of work!" And yeah, it kind of is — I really need your help!
If you'd like to help (which I hope you do!), please send some photos and information about your location. I'm not writing this letter for fun — I promise! I'd also love to visit someday, but I'm only 11, so maybe in the future. My teacher said this letter should be at least three paragraphs, so I'm trying my best here. Oh, and if you can, could you also send some artifacts or cool things from your area? That would be amazing (but only if you want to, of course).
I think this counts as three paragraphs, right? Anyway, thank you so much for reading my letter and for sending anything back — even if it's just a short note. (But please don't send a hate letter! You know what they say in kindergarten — 'If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all.') Okay, this is the end now — thanks again, and goodbye!
Yours truly,[Name]
33.And this third-grader really, REALLY needs to learn their proverbs:
34.This person figured out the best way to get rid of your broken, old flatscreen TV (just bait some porch pirates):
35.This kid is learning — slowly, LOL — to control his emotions:
36.And this person learned it is a mistake to try to sneak out a fart near this indoor air quality monitor at their friend's house:
37.This middle-aged man learned that eventually mom — even 25 years later — will find your stash book (and not be happy!):
Related:
38.This grandma learned that "Merry Christmas" can be rearranged into something, shall we say, less festive:
39.And this pub made it their mission to teach octogenarians to read the fine print:
40.This person learned firsthand the old chestnut, "ask a stupid question, get a stupid answer":
41.This person was walking through their park, learning about the local flora, when they stumbled upon this curious plant called a "lamp post":
42.And this husband — upon discovering this pile — realized his wife is her workplace's official pen thief:
43.This middle-aged couple is going to learn that not ALL products should be bought in bulk (unless they are really, really, REALLY irregular):
44.The person responsible for this sign probably should learn some more math:
45.And anyone who reads this will learn why men maybe shouldn't write advice columns:
46.Anyone who read this sign learned the TRUTH:
47.This person learned their dog is obsessed with carrots:
48.This boss learned he should really lock his truck after this prank:
49.This sign-maker learned that different age groups need different messaging:
50.And lastly, this one will teach YOU something (it's wild how this actually works!):
Also in Internet Finds:
Also in Internet Finds:
Also in Internet Finds:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
19 Funny Women Who Tweeted Things So Hilarious I Woke Up My Roommate At 3 A.M. And Now She's Threatening To Move Out
I truly cannot believe it is already August, but here we are. Let's celebrate getting through another week with some more funny tweets by women! We've rounded up the best jokes from Bluesky, Threads, and that we can't endorse the latter, but we are pleased to bring you the comical relief that can still be found on the platform, free of the surrounding chaos. PS: Be sure to give these funny women a follow! 1. 2. Related: 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Related: 8. 9. 10. Related: 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Related: 16. 17. 18. 19. Check out our last roundup of women's tweets if you missed it! Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:


Los Angeles Times
6 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘King of the Hill' and ‘Gumball' are back, and I tell you what, it's about time
I will say this: I should be watching more cartoons. It has been harder to indulge this passion for some of the best, most pleasurable work television has to offer with so many ordinary series fighting for my professional time and attention, but here and now I make a more or less midyear resolution to get back to them. Please hold me to it. Two great animated series are posting new seasons after long hiatuses (neither on the original platform, both on Hulu). 'King of the Hill,' which ran on Fox from 1997 to 2009, lives anew with 10 fresh episodes streaming Monday; 'The Amazing World of Gumball' (2011-2019), one of the greatest products of a great age of Cartoon Network, is back as 'The Wonderfully Weird World of Gumball,' in a 20-episode season now available. (Earlier seasons of both shows are available on the platform.) Each is under the protection of their original creators; both are their easily recognizable, extremely different old selves. Visually, there is little to no difference between one multi-camera sitcom and the next, one single-camera mockumentary sitcom and the next, one single-camera non-mockumentary and the next, one CBS police procedural and the next. But every cartoon creates its individual grammar, its dynamic, its world, its synergy between the image and the actors, its level of awkwardness of slickness. (The voice actors, I mean — animators are also actors.) There are trends, of course, in shapes and line and ways to render a mouth or an eyeball, and much drawing is drawn from the history of the medium, because art influences artists. But the spectrum is wide, and novelty counts for a lot. Created by Ben Bocquelet, 'Gumball' doesn't settle for a single style — that is to say, not settling is its style. The characters comprise a hodgepodge, nay, an encyclopedia of visual references, dimensions, materials and degrees of resolution, and include traditional 2-D animation, puppet animation, photo collage and live-action, usually set against a photographic background and knit into a world whose infinite variety seems nothing short of inevitable. (Netflix's late 'The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants' is the only other cartoon with such a range of modes. Like many modern cartoons (excepting anime, which I would argue is a different, if widely influential, art), its main characters are children. Gumball, currently voiced by Alkaio Thiele, is a blue cat, the son of a cat mother and a rabbit father; he has a pink rabbit little sister, Anais (Kinza Syed Khan), and an adoptive brother, Darwin (Hero Hunter in the new season), a pet goldfish who grew legs and gets around quite easily in the air. Their middle-school classmates include a ghost, a cloud, a banana, an ice cream cone, a daisy, a balloon, a cactus, a T. Rex and a flying eyeball. Gumball's girlfriend, Penny (Teresa Gallagher) is a shape-shifting yellow fairy. Each is rendered in a different style, and that is just the tip of the animated iceberg. Like the best cartoons ostensibly made for kids, it doesn't underestimate its audience, what it might understand or can handle. Many 'Gumball' episodes devolve into a sort of authentically disturbing horror movie, including the last episode of the original series, which saw the characters frighteningly transformed into realistic animated children and a void opening just before the closing credits. It also demonstrates an adult skepticism about the world that might profitably infect young minds. There are critiques of capitalism, consumerism and online culture: In the first episode of the new season, an evil talking hamburger controls the corporate universe; in another, mother Nicole (Gallagher again) is seduced into virtual reality by a lonely, jealous chatbot. The decade and a half since 'King of the Hill' went off the air — surreptitiously, if obviously, referenced in a remark about 'that cooking show that Fox stupidly canceled 15 years ago' — is not exactly represented in the new season, but time has passed. (The characters did not age 13 years over the original series — but they grew a little.) Hank, voiced by co-creator Mike Judge, and Peggy Hill (Kathy Najimy), returning to Arlen, Texas, from Saudi Arabia, where Hank had been exercising his expertise in all things propane, are drawn older by the addition of a few wrinkles but are substantially unchanged. As a character, Hank, of course, distrusts change, though possibly not as much as the friends who gather, as before, in the alley behind his house; indeed, he worries that the love of soccer he acquired while away will reduce his standing in their eyes. Peggy, on the other hand, was enlarged by her time away; she likes to demonstrate a few words of Arabic. Both Hills are dealing uncomfortably with retirement; he looks for odd jobs, takes a stab at making beer (not that fruit-flavored stuff); she exercises. The show is set in an awkwardly drawn but highly evocative, extremely ordinary environment that perfectly serves its stories; it feels like an accurate outsider-art rendition of its middle-class Texas suburb. There is little in it that couldn't be handled as live-action situation comedy; indeed, for long stretches you can close your eyes and let it play in your head like an old-time radio show — 'Ozzie and Harriet,' or 'Vic and Sade' for the deep cut — which testifies to the quality of the writing and the performances. (Judge's voice has an unschooled quality that perfectly matches the drawing. I was once almost certain that Hank's voice was that of my friend Will Ray, a country-music guitar slinger — which would have made sense, given Judge's interest in the music and his occasional moonlighting as a bass player. That is neither here or there, but I am happy to have found a place to mention it.) Their son, Bobby (Pamela Adlon), is now an adult; little dots on his chin indicate either that he can grow a beard but neglects to shave or that he can't quite grow a beard; it doesn't seem exactly like a choice. A formerly established talent for cooking — the final episode of the original run concerned his ability to judge the quality of a cut of meat — has blossomed into his becoming a restaurateur, offering a fusion of Japanese and Texas cuisine; he is evidently good at this, though for whatever reason — more work to draw them? — his restaurant is devoid of customers. The torch he carries for sometime girlfriend Connie Souphanousinphone (Lauren Tom) occupies the other half of his storyline here. There are light topical references — a sidelong joke about the names billionaires give their children, for example — but the show happily lives in its world of day-to-day annoyances and victories. Hank is excited by a trip to the George W. Bush presidential library, but one can't imagine him with any affection for the current Oval Office occupant; he's too common-sense for that. Extreme views and conspiracy theories are loaded into Hank's pest exterminator friend Dale Gribble. The late Johnny Hardwick, who voiced him for the first six episodes of the new season, was replaced by Toby Huss. (Jonathan Joss, who played the character John Redcorn, died in a shooting this June.) Cartoons have a way of dealing with death — they don't have to — and time means no more there than the animators want it to. It's a comfortable state of being.

Wall Street Journal
6 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Videos of Cute Dolls Behaving Badly Have Gone Quiet. Fans Are Freaking Out.
The videos feature tiny animal dolls getting drunk, dealing drugs, cheating on their partners, going to jail and breaking out of jail. Scenes include a meerkat mother commenting on her elephant daughter's weight, a hedgehog drinking before a driving test, and a cat consuming bleach to cope with her cheating husband. This is Sylvanian Drama, a social-media account with over 3.5 million followers on Instagram and TikTok and a fan base of adults who can't get enough of the R-rated skits.