D, on 08 July 2014 - 03:23 AM, said:
Abyss, on 08 July 2014 - 12:36 AM, said:
amphibian, on 07 July 2014 - 09:47 PM, said:
Except opinions about content and length of speeches.
No more than three minutes each and no embarrassing stories about the bride and groom however well meant, please.
YOU GET ONE JOKE. ONE.
Why are you guys so stuck on that? I've been to weddings where one of the speeches (a great one by the MotB comes to mind, actually) made lots of jokes at the bride or groom's expense and it went over fantastically with everyone. I'm sure there are families that wouldn't enjoy this, but why assume CF's is like that when you know nothing about them?
Because for every wedding you're referring to are six. teen. thousand. where the speeches are awful for a variety of reasons and i've been sitting in the crowd suffering at most of them.
Also, this...
Una, on 08 July 2014 - 05:33 AM, said:
1. No jokes at the couple's expense. It's fine if it goes over well, but if it goes over badly, it will go fantastically badly. Like, "one side of the family holding it against the other forever" badly. ...
Illuyankas, on 08 July 2014 - 07:57 AM, said:
Just don't do any jokes or tell any unedited tales that would upset a grandparent....
amphibian, on 08 July 2014 - 04:03 PM, said:
Because I've been to a wedding where someone tried to be a stand-up comedian and it failed and many weddings where someone went on for 10 minutes repetitively about how much they love the bride or groom and how life is going to be awesome. Inside jokes are also not recommended.
If someone wants to declare the undying love/future happiness of a couple for a long time, they should do it for the video cameras and not when everyone else has to pay attention to the speech and politely clap at the end, while wishing we'd been able to eat, drink, talk, dance and mingle instead of listening to that shmaltz.
...short, sweet, sincere and unless you're Sarah Silverman or Jerry Seinfeld don't try to be because it fails far more often than it doesn't and no one will tell you so to your face. Unless they're really drunk or hate you.
cerveza_fiesta, on 08 July 2014 - 05:28 PM, said:
..., a heartfelt well-wishing to my sister and her husband is probably the best bet. His people will appreciate some restraint, my people will likely be drunk at that point and won't care either way as long as my sister is happy with it. The best man and groomsman are the groom's 2 younger brothers, and are sure to deliver a more unsavory speech than me, so no need for all of us to gang up.
I think I'll keep it relatively short too. When a speech is carefully crafted, you can deliver a lot of meaning in under 3 minutes. That's pretty common in small business pitching. More than an elevator pitch, but long enough to say what needs saying without some kind of audiovisual accompaniment. I've been at my share of weddings where the speeches went on for ages and you keep thinking "is it impolite for me to refill my drink in the middle of this boring-ass monologue?".
You are wise beyond your years and province of origin.
Also, if the younger bros nail it, great, and if they blow it, yours will look that much better.
Just by virtue of them being younger and the Groom's bros, it makes more sense for you to go the sincere route.