When the Arts and Humanities Research Council announced a major research project in 2013 on ââ the Mail Online inevitably reported âoutrage as academics are handed ÂŁ2mâ â for what it described as âa birdbrained ideaâ.
But lead researcher Naomi Sykes, associate professor in zooarchaeology at the University of Nottingham, was âover the moonâ.
Dr Sykes hoped that all the jokey, pun-filled articles offered them âa great opportunity to challenge widely held perceptions (that chickens are just low-risk healthy cheap meat, that they are stupid, ridiculous and meaningless) and for us to demonstrate how important our research isâŠ[with its] serious implications for modern issues of environmental sustainability and food security, it highlights the connection between human and animal health (including antibiotic resistance), well-being and diet (including the obesity epidemic)â.
Unfortunately, by the time the researchers thought about how to respond and use the coverage to their advantage, the news cycle had moved on. A number of public engagement events were held, but Dr Sykes always had the impression that they were âpreaching to the convertedâ when the people she really wanted to reach were âall those many red-top readers who are likely to just accept the stories in the pressâ.
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The only way forward, she decided, was to adopt a more creative approach to outreach and âjust embrace the comedy value of the chickenâ. It was this that led the team to the unusual step of appointing a comedian-in-residence.
Stepping into the role is Steve Cross, former head of public engagement at University College London, where he pioneered the Bright Club comedy nights which see academics using comedy to present their research. He has now taken to the stage himself in the niche field of âintellectual comedyâ and largely makes his living by performing and training others.
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âWhen the project was funded, they had the mickey taken out of them,â he said. âThey want me to take the mickey backâŠIâll be playing off their intellectual seriousness with my complete lack of it.â
To prepare for his new role, Dr Cross spent a day with the research team that he described as âlike a PhD-level supervision in five different subjectsâ. He has been trying out five-minute chunks of âchicken-based materialâ at different gigs and will be compering an as part of the Being Human festival.
Himself a vegetarian, Dr Cross has struggled to find the comic potential in topics such as âcockfighting in the Canariesâ but promises plenty of other good material from the byways of chicken breeding and the 5,000 years of âhuman-chicken interactionsâ.
Although his role was "at the extreme end of the projectâs many outreach outputsâ, Dr Cross said that comedy "provides another way of thinkingâ and in that sense was "just like an academic discipline".
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: A chicken walks into a bar...
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