laugh track

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See also: laughtrack and laugh-track

English

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Alternative forms

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Noun

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laugh track (plural laugh tracks)

  1. The soundtrack of laughter sounds that accompanies a television comedy show.
    Synonyms: canned laughter, laughter track
    • 1997, George Carlin, Brain Droppings[1], New York: Hyperion Books, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 173:
      You know where you never see a camcorder? At a funeral. Wouldn't that be fun? Especially if you didn't know any of the people there. Why not go to a stranger's funeral, and bring your camcorder? Have a little fun! Zoom in on the corpse's nose hairs. Then pull back, and pan over to the widow's tears. Get a tight shot of that. Do a montage of people wracked with grief. Then go home and put a laugh track on it! Smoke a joint and show it to your friends. That would be a lot of fun.
    • 2004, Robert Kubey, Creating Television, →ISBN:
      Possibly a show with no laugh track would improve with a well-done laugh track.
    • 2012, Ridley Pearson, No Witnesses, →ISBN:
      He felt it weird to have this discussion with a laugh track running faintly in the background.
    • 2013, Allan Neuwirth, They'll Never Put That on the Air: The New Age of TV Comedy, →ISBN:
      There were shows where they let us not use a laugh track ... and portions of shows. Whenever they were in the O.R. or serious surgery, there was no laugh track.