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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Manchester club sees humour as best medicine after attack

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Rosie Scammell -


Days after a bomb ripped through the Manchester Arena, locals take their seats at a comedy club where British humour is helping people cope with the aftermath of the terror attack.


“It’s important to have a bit of humour when you’re dealing with real-life stress and challenging events, because it helps people deal with it in a way, it’s like a coping mechanism,” said Cate Gardner, who had come to the Frog and Bucket comedy club to celebrate her birthday.


“Instead of crying, it’s better to laugh in a way, because you just sort of get through it, and you help others get through it and it’s how you move forward,” she said. Humour made a cautious appearance just hours after the attack, as poet Tony Walsh spoke of Manchester’s habits and great history at a vigil held in the city’s Albert Square.


Hushed laughter broke the silence of the crowd, which was followed by huge applause at the end of the poem.


David Perkin, director of the Frog and Bucket, said humour had for generations been sought as a way to “soften” problems.


“British humour will always respond to anything, whether it’s a good thing or a bad thing,” he said.


Perkin recalled crowds arriving at the club’s previous venue in the wake of the 1996 Irish Republican Army bomb which injured more than 200 people in Manchester.


“The Frog reopened on the Monday night and people were queueing to get in to hear the comedians take the mick about the IRA bomb.”


As British Prime Minister Theresa May raised the country’s threat level to “critical”, social media users adopted the hashtag “British Threat Levels” to describe the moments that would really terrify them.


“Eye contact on the Tube,” wrote one user of etiquette on the London underground.


“We’re British. I don’t get scared until the threat level hits ‘Replacement Bus Service’,” wrote another in reference to train travel disruptions.


Satirical website The Daily Mash joked about the prime minister’s decision to have the army take on police work, by quoting a fictional serviceman. “Soldier Tom Logan said: ‘I have no experience of investigating break-ins, so what I’ll probably do is point my gun at people and ask them if they did it’,” the website wrote.


For those at the comedy club over the weekend, jokes were seen as a way of helping the nation come to terms with its worst terror attack in more than a decade.


“No matter what goes on in life, I think it’s always good to lighten things and just enjoy laughter and enjoy your life,” said Christian Bajda, at the Frog and Bucket with friends.— AFP


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