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The Cross-Border Commuter Sketch: Comedy That Unites Three Borders

Traffic jams, parking and mixed accents: the commuter's daily grind has become a comedy genre of its own in Luxembourg.

By Lina Weber··1 min read

Every day, tens of thousands of people cross the Belgian, French and German borders to work in Luxembourg. This massive phenomenon has logically spawned its own sketch sub-genre: the commuter character, stuck between two countries, two languages and a parking spot that doesn't exist. It's become a staple of local comedy accounts.

A Highly Shareable Daily Life

The secret to these sketches is ultra-specificity: the recurring traffic jam, the pre-dawn alarm, the accent that gives away your home country. The more precise the detail, the more it makes you tag a colleague living the exact same thing. That's the fuel of local virality: you don't share a joke, you share proof you're not alone.

Laughing Together Instead of Dividing

The angle that makes this genre last: it picks on neither commuters nor residents, it laughs at a shared situation. A good commuter sketch unites Arlon, Thionville, Trier and Luxembourg City in the same fit of laughter. At a time when everything can divide, humour that brings three borders together over the same traffic jam is almost a public service.

Sources

  • Analyse du sous-genre comique du frontalier dans les sketchs locaux
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