They say every egg is full of potential.
So was my gym membership.
Dark-humor about potential: gym memberships and eggs both carry unfulfilled promise. The egg's potential matters less than its temporal expiration.
The yolk's on you. Our hand-curated collection of egg humor, served sunny-side up.
They say every egg is full of potential.
So was my gym membership.
Dark-humor about potential: gym memberships and eggs both carry unfulfilled promise. The egg's potential matters less than its temporal expiration.
An omelette is just
a scrambled egg that got its life together.
Dark-humor observation: omelettes are scrambled eggs that got life organized. Implies most eggs never achieve coherent adult form before consumption.
What did the egg say during its existential crisis?
'Am I the chicken's legacy or the chicken's replacement?'
Dark-humor existential crisis: is the egg a chicken's genetic legacy or evolutionary replacement? Philosophical uncertainty about generational succession.
An egg, a piece of toast, and a strip of bacon walk into a bar.
The bartender says, 'Sorry, we don't serve breakfast.' The bacon says, 'That's fine, I died for this.'
Dark-humor multi-character scenario: breakfast items walk into bar; bacon acknowledges its mortality. Treats food as having agency about its own death.
I asked my egg how it wanted to die.
It said, 'Quietly, in a soufflé — not screaming in a microwave.'
Dark-humor egg preference: death via souffle (quiet) preferred over microwave (screaming). Treats cooking methods as execution styles with aesthetic preferences.
What's an egg's biggest fear?
Being told it has potential and then getting scrambled anyway.
Dark-humor fear: being told eggs have potential then getting scrambled anyway. Conflates false hope with culinary processing, ironic and depressing.
An egg asked the universe, 'What is my purpose?'
The universe said, 'You bind meatloaf.'
Dark-humor job assignment: universe tells egg its purpose is binding meatloaf. Treats eggs as having cosmic insignificance despite their practical utility.
The egg didn't ask to be born.
Then again, neither did any of us, and we still have to pay taxes.
Dark-humor existential: eggs didn't volunteer for existence, yet face expiration dates like taxes. Equates birth and taxes as unavoidable harsh realities.
Eggs in the fridge are basically
on death row, watching each other get taken one by one.
Dark-humor metaphor: fridge eggs are death row inmates watching peers disappear sequentially. Treats consumption as execution observed by remaining eggs.
What's the egg's review of the frying pan?
'One star. Got heated too fast. Would not return.'
Dark-humor product review: frying pan gets one star (worst rating). The pan got "heated" (angry/abusive) too fast; the relationship was toxic.
What's an egg's worst nightmare?
A whisk. It's basically a medieval torture device.
Dark-humor equipment: a whisk is an egg's nightmare (torture device). The wire whisk physically dismantles eggs during mixing.
An egg walks into a bar.
Bartender says, 'We don't serve breakfast.' The egg says, 'That's fine, I'm here for the hard stuff.'
Dark-humor absurdity: egg walks into bar seeking "hard stuff" (alcohol) despite being literally hard-boiled. Treats cooked eggs as seeking social venues unsuccessfully.
Showing page 1 of 2 — 23 jokes total
The Weekly Scramble
One fact — One joke — One recipe.
The Weekly Scramble
One fact — One joke — One recipe.