Talk:Low comedy

The pages for high comedy and low comedy both claim that the subject of the page can be seen often in sitcoms. How can the main component of sitcom humor be both high and low comedy?

Perhaps the pages refer to how some sitcoms employ low Comedy as their primary element whilst others rely on high Comedy? 24.34.93.184 (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 00:55, 23 January 2013 (UTC).

I noticed that two of the major sources cited within the Low Comedy page (Low Comedy of high society and A salute to Low Comedy are both listed as Proquest dissertations and as such require one to be a student or professor to access their content whilst neither article is accessible through Google which will only redirect one either to Proquest or to this very Wikipedia page. I therefore have two questions. Firstly, and I hope the answer is yes, does this page conform to Wikipedia verifiability guidelines and secondly how does one actually access the content of said sources.

I just noticed that the Homer link in the section about the Simpsons is to the Greek mythic poet rather than the cartoon character. I would have fixed that immediately but I was just temporarily locked out for disruptive editing. If I were editing disruptively I was not aware of it and I apologize to whomever I inadvertently disrupted. To prevent myself from making the same mistake again I shall from henceforth declare my intended changes in the Talk Page such that my fellow Wikipedians may warn me before I do anything rash. With that in mind I am alerting all of you before I insert aforementioned edit. Thank you.

Ok. I have absolutely no idea how to spell Apu's last name. When I check on Wikipedia I can never remember the spelling long enough to insert it into the internal link. If I leave it as Apu then it will only be a link to a disambiguation page. I will leave it as a red link and anyone who can remember his name longer than I can can fix it later on. That would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.