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The
Richest Man in the World Speaks in Las Vegas
by John
Kinde
Bill
Gates spoke in Las Vegas on January 7, 2007. Arriving almost
four hours early guaranteed me a seat about 100 yards from the
speaking platform. Thank goodness for big-screen projection.
The crowd and the lines were something like a Rolling Stones
concert. Except there were more geeks. About an hour from the
start of the program I doubted they'd be able to get everyone
into their seats...but magically they did. And the speech started
pretty much on time.
As the start of the keynote presentation for the 40th Anniversary
Consumer Electronic Show approached, I wondered how much humor,
if any, Bill Gates would use. I expected that he would use
humor in some way to open his talk. As I watched him speak
it was obvious that, although brilliant, he is not a comedian.
In fact his use of humor from the platform was minimal, but
he made it obvious to me that he does have a good sense of
humor. Remember that a sense of humor is more than just telling
jokes. And even in a speech that is far from an award-winning
example of humor from the platform, there are some good lessons
to be learned.
If you're not a funny person, opening a speech with humor,
or more specifically jokes, can be risky. Additionally, this
CES keynote speech posed three more risks. First, the audience
was more diverse than cohesive, coming from a variety of backgrounds
and not really knowing other members of the audience. Humor
often depends on a certain degree of common experience, which
was pretty much lacking at this event. Also, as the opening
keynoter, there was little chance to use a situational or
observational piece of humor. About the only common experience
of the group was waiting together in one line, then moving
to another line, then another...before entering the hall.
Add to those challenges, the size of the audience and the
hall were far from ideal for presenting humor. So using humor
to open the speech was a quadruple challenge for Bill Gates.
1. Not a funny speaker. 2. Non-cohesive audience. 3. The opening
speech of the event. 4. Huge room and audience.
Here's how he handled it. He had a 3-4 minute video slide-show
which introduced him. An excellent choice. The video was the
vehicle for carrying his opening humor. It had clips from
previous keynotes, making mistakes on talk-show interviews,
bloopers, dancing, goofing around...all designed to gently
poke fun at him while also humanizing him. He didn't need
a big credibility building introduction, as he is already
a legend. The humorous, fun-style introduction video was perfect.
Although the slide show was not knee-slapping humor, it was
the funniest part of the talk and helped convey that he was
a real person. From watching it, we knew that he is more like
us than he is different from us (if we don't compare bank
accounts). And it was much more effective than a traditional
written introduction. During his 70 minutes on the platform,
he had maybe 6-7 light laugh lines. Comedy coach Jim Richardson
would refer to them as "titters" to distinguish them from
solid laughs. He poked fun at himself and other Microsoft
founders. Just a bit of a light touch to an otherwise mostly-techno
talk. A humor and presentations coach would definitely recommend
more humor in a talk of that length.
CES has posted the speech online, but the humor-value of
the speech is almost totally missing from the video link.
First, the wrong opening video segment was posted. It appears
that they posted a music-video commercial which I don't remember
seeing at the live event. The actual introduction video slide
show is not provided on the internet link. Secondly, since
the audience was not miked, and also because the laughs were
small, most of the audience response to the humor was not
picked up on the recording, making it appear that the laugh
lines were falling totally flat.
Bill Gates is definitely not a powerful, dynamic or funny
speaker. But the opening slide-show to introduce him was a
great choice. And it was obvious that throughout the talk
the audience was quiet and listened. In a huge room, maybe
4000 people, there was no significant distracted chatter.
He didn't take himself too seriously. The audience respected
him and liked him. And I knew that he had a sense of humor...in
spite of not being particularly funny.
(752
words)
©
Copyright 2007John Kinde
A well-known
observational humorist, John Kinde presents workshops and
coaching on humor and improv skills for business. John is
part of the Fripp Las Vegas team and the author of a series
of audio and video learning tapes. You will find humor skills
articles at http://www.HumorPower.com
This article from John Kinde's online publications is used
with his permission .
Learn
more about Patricia Fripp & Larry Wilde's The Gift
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Jessel, Jerry Lewis, Danny Thomas, and Ed Wynn.
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