This Monkey Sits Down at a Typewriter...

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We've all heard that a million monkeys banging on a million typewriters will eventually produce the entire works of Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet, we know this is not true. ~Robert Wilensky (1951–2013), Computer Science Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, 1996 speech

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I heard someone tried the monkeys-on-typewriters bit trying for the plays of William Shakespeare, but all they got was the collected works of Francis Bacon. ~Bill Hoest (1926–1988)

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I heard that if you locked William Shakespeare in a room with a typewriter for long enough he'd eventually write all the songs by The Monkees. ~Anonymous joke found on the internet, 2007

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If you're trying to write great literature with monkeys, it breaks down like this: One million monkeys typing for eternity will eventually write the complete works of Shakespeare. Ten thousand monkeys typing for 10,000 years will give you a Hemingway, but you gotta get 'em drunk first. And ten monkeys typing over, say, Columbus Day weekend, will give you a Dan Brown. Actually, no typewriters are ...

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... needed, they'll just smear it on the wall. ~The Colbert Report (Stephen Colbert), "Don't Mess with Jesus," Episode 2078, 2006 June 21st

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Dilbert: Well, what do you think of my new poem?
Dogbert: I once read that given infinite time, a thousand monkeys with typewriters would eventually write the entire works of Shakespeare.
Dilbert: But what about my poem?
Dogbert: Three monkeys, ten minutes.
~Scott Adams, Dilbert, 1989 May 15th, dilbert.com

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A thousand monkeys at a thousand typewriters will eventually write "Hamlet." A thousand cats at a thousand typewriters will tell you to go write your own damn "Hamlet." ~Doug Savage, Savage Chickens, 2014

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If I had a monkey for every time some penny-ante crook tried to pen their criminal malfeasance on Pegnose Pete, I'd have enough monkeys to work out a reasonable sequel to Hamlet by now! ~Inspector Canard, Escape from Monkey Island (LucasArts, by Sean Clark & Michael Stemmle), 2000

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'It was the best of times, it was the blurst of times?' You stupid monkey! ~The Simpsons, "Last Exit to Springfield," 1993, written by Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky [S4, E17, Mr Burns]

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In a number of mathematics books, they made reference to something that either proves infinity or the law of probability. They claim that if you take an infinite number of monkeys and an infinite number of typewriters and you set them down and they just type away, that eventually given enough time they would type all the great books. Now, they're gonna type a lot of gibberish, but eventually they ...

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... will type all the great books. If they ever tried this, they would have to hire guys to check the monkeys to see if they were turning out anything worthwhile... "Harry, hold on, Post 15 here has something!... 'To be or not to be, that is the gazornaanplatt.'" ~Bob Newhart, "An Infinite Number of Monkeys," The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back!, 1960 [Supposedly Steve Allen did a monkeys typing "to be ...

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... or not to be, that is the {gibberish}" skit on television in the 1950s, but I can't find it. Anyone have details for this? –tg]

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How often might a man, after he had jumbled a set of letters in a bag, fling them out upon the ground before they would fall into an exact poem, yea or so much as make a good discourse in prose?... How long might a man sprinkle colours upon canvas with a careless hand before they would make the exact picture of a man... How long might twenty thousand blind men, which should be sent out from the ...

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... remote parts of England, wander up and down before they would all meet upon Salisbury plains, and fall into rank and file in the exact order of an army? And yet this is much more easy to be imagined than how the innumerable blind parts of matter should rendezvous themselves into a world. ~Thomas Reid, "First Principles of Necessary Truths," Essays on the Intellectual Powers of the Human Mind, ...

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... 1785 [Pretty sure this was how they invented Scrabble®. –tg]

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For a Tragedy and a Comedy are both composed of the same alphabet. ~Aristotle (384–322 BCE), On Generation and Corruption, Book I, Part II

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If I let my fingers wander idly over the keys of a typewriter it might happen that my screed made an intelligible sentence. If an army of monkeys were strumming on typewriters they might write all the books in the British Museum. ~A. S. Eddington, "The Running-Down of the Universe," 1927

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Huxley says that a half-dozen monkeys provided with typewriters would, in a few eternities, produce all the books in the British Museum. Strictly speaking, one immortal monkey would be sufficient. ~Jorge Luis Borges, "La Biblioteca Total (The Total Library)," 1939 [Borges traces the broad idea for the infinite monkey theorem all the way back to the ancient Greek philosopher Democritus. "This ...

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... essay, inspired by his dreary job at the municipal library, soon turned into the famous 1941 story, 'The Library of Babel'" (Eliot Weinberger). –tg]

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If Shakespeare Were a Writer Today:
Hollywood exec: Willie, baby! We're likin' your "Hamlet" screenplay but finding it a bit dark and it didn't test well with our focus group. What if it was a comedy? And what if instead of Horatio, he has a wacky neighbor named Larry?
Bob from Legal: It appears a group of monkeys who hit random keys on a typewriter claim they have already written "Hamlet" ...

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... so can we change the name to "Piglet"?
~Dave Whamond, Reality Check, 2016 April 3rd [a little altered —tg]

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They say that a monkey in the right frame of mind
Given enough paper and given enough time
Is bound to type Shakespeare eventually
Oh baby, don't give up on me...
~Timbuk3, "Don't Give Up On Me," Edge of Allegiance, 1989, written by Pat MacDonald & Barbara K. MacDonald ♫

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I read in a newspaper that a certain Mrs. Winifred Venton, with the help of the Enfield College of Technology computer, has at last cracked the cipher of the Sonnets. The Message: Shakespeare was really King Edward VI, who did not die, as the history books say, when he was sixteen, but at the age of 125. In addition to writing "Shakespeare," he wrote not only all of the Ben Jonson and Bacon, but ...

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... Don Quixote as well. ~W. H. Auden, "Shakespeare and the Computers," A Certain World: A Commonplace Book, 1970

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Sign at exhibit of apes using tablets: PLEASE DON'T GIVE APES THE ZOO'S WI-FI PASSWORD
Visitor: No, I don't think that's how Twitter got started, but I wouldn't doubt it, either.
~Wiley Miller, Non Sequitur, 2020 February 6th

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I've been thinkin' about the whole infinite monkey thing lately... Well, the whole theory is flawed. "Infinite" is too many monkeys. Over 8 monkeys and you're running into discipline and hygiene issues. And who's gonna read infinite monkey scripts? Some chimp could have written the next Da Vinci Code, but newsflash: He's eating that script before you ever see it. Here's what you do: You buy a $2 ...

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... bag of nuts. You go trap yourself some squirrels. You put them on word processors — with spellcheck — and you shoot for a "Two and a Half Men" script... ~Darby Conley, Get Fuzzy, 2009 September 13th [Bucky —tg]

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Rob: Ever hear of the theory that if you give an infinite amount of monkeys typewriters, they will eventually type the works of Shakespeare?
Bucky: Pff. Filthy plagiarists... I bet they'd chimp it all up, too. I, for one, don't want to read Bonobo and Juliet. Oranguthello? I don't think so... King Lemur? Now there's a tragedy...
Satchel: I bet they'd start with the works of Joan Collins or ...

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... something easy first.
~Darby Conley, Get Fuzzy, 2007 December 23rd

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An infinite number of monkeys on an infinite number of typewriters will eventually define all that is Canada. ~MacLaren McCann advertising agency (Toronto), "I Am Canadian," Molson Canadian television commercial, 1998

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Ford, there's an infinite number of monkeys outside who want to talk to us about this script for Hamlet they've worked out. ~Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, 1978 [Radio, episode 2. –tg]

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But how can I credibly delay Hamlet's revenge until Act V? ~Ruben Bolling, "Tom the Dancing Bug's Super-Fun-Pak Comix: A Million Monkeys at a Million Typewriters," Tom the Dancing Bug, 2008 July 12th

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Monkey Typewriter Theory: An immortal monkey pounding on a typewriter will eventually reproduce the text of 'Hamlet.'
Baby Keyboard Theory: Left alone, a baby pounding on a computer keyboard will eventually order 32 cases of bathroom caulk from an online retailer.
~Paul Trap, Thatababy, 2014 February 13th

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Suppose we have a very large number of monkeys, each banging away r

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