laughing stock - meaning and definition. What is laughing stock
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What (who) is laughing stock - definition

ALBUM BY TALK TALK
Myrrhman; Runeii; Laughing stock; Laughing Stock (album)
  • Mark Hollis requested that a [[tree]] of birds feature in the album cover to connect the album to ''Spirit of Eden''.
  • Neumann]] U47 Tube microphone, the kind used to record many of the album's components.
  • 24-track machine]] with [[Dolby SR]] formats.

laughing stock         
also laughing-stock (laughing stocks)
If you say that a person or an organization has become a laughing stock, you mean that they are supposed to be important or serious but have been made to seem ridiculous.
The truth must never get out. If it did she would be a laughing-stock.
...his policies became the laughing stock of the financial community.
N-COUNT
laughing stock         
¦ noun a person subjected to general mockery or ridicule.
laughingstock         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Laughingstock
n. to make a laughingstock of smb.

Wikipedia

Laughing Stock

Laughing Stock is the fifth and final studio album by English band Talk Talk, released in 1991. Following their previous release Spirit of Eden (1988), bassist Paul Webb left the group, which reduced Talk Talk to the duo of singer/multi-instrumentalist Mark Hollis and drummer Lee Harris. Talk Talk then acrimoniously left EMI and signed to Polydor who released the album on their newly revitalised jazz-based Verve Records label. Laughing Stock was recorded at London's Wessex Sound Studios from September 1990 to April 1991 with producer Tim Friese-Greene and engineer Phill Brown.

Like Spirit of Eden the album featured improvised instrumentation from a large ensemble of musicians. The demanding sessions were marked by Hollis' perfectionist tendencies and desire to create a suitable recording atmosphere. Engineer Phill Brown stated that the album, like its predecessor, was "recorded by chance, accident, and hours of trying every possible overdub idea." The band split up following its release, effectively making Laughing Stock their last official release.

The album garnered significant critical praise, often cited as a watershed entry for the budding post-rock genre at the time of its release. Pitchfork named it the eleventh best album of the 1990s, saying it "makes its own environment and becomes more than the sum of its sounds." In a 2007 list, Stylus Magazine named it the greatest post-rock album.

Examples of use of laughing stock
1. Kim has made a laughing stock of President Vladimir Putin.
2. "I just can‘t believe this, we‘ll be a laughing stock.
3. We have gone from being the economic pride of Europe to its laughing stock.
4. The U.S.–spread misinformation has become again the laughing stock of the public.
5. But these embarrassing pictures are more likely to make him a national laughing stock.