Normally, WWE's creative team find humour in things that the vast majority of the audience struggles to raise even a titter at. It's long been said that Vince McMahon is largely out of the loop when it comes to having his finger on the pulse of what his fan base want to see, and it's hard to argue with that when 20 minutes of Monday Night Raw air time is dedicated to a Barrack Obama impressionist fighting with someone pretending to be Hillary Clinton. Sitting merrily alongside such hilarity, a gimmick handed to talented female worker Natalya several years which had the Hart family member struggling with flatulence was just asinine. It's so painfully obvious when fans aren't enjoying something, so why even bother doing it? On the flipside of that argument, there have been times when WWE have genuinely had people in stitches, but that's usually down to individual performances from the men and women involved rather than great writing. Shawn Michaels once said that even the worse scenarios can be made great, depending on how good the performer is, and that seems to be the case when WWE's attempts at comedy hit home. Let's get this started...