The creators of 'Cards Against Humanity' explain the secret of staying funny even after the 'punk rock authenticity' is gone
Max Temkin Ben Hantoot Cards Against Humanity
Max Temkin Ben Hantoot Cards Against Humanity

(Cards Against Humanity co-creators Ben Hantoot (left) and Max Temkin (right)Cards Against Humanity)

Back in November 2016, just weeks after Donald Trump was elected President of the United States, the creators of the irreverent card game Cards Against Humanity (CAH) raised just over $100,000 to dig a deep hole to nowhere.

It wasn't the company's first stunt, either, or its last.

Back in 2014, for instance, CAH sold 30,000 boxes of dried bull excrement at $6 a pop as a Black Friday "deal." Most recently, the company aired its first-ever Super Bowl commercial this year: 30 seconds of a stationary potato, on which the word "Advertisement" had been written in marker.

As it turns out, there's a lot of work that goes into these stunts. The "holiday hole," for instance, took almost two years of planning, including finding permits, talking to neighbors, hiring contractors, and arranging for a livestream. And it was all just for one very strange, but undeniably hilarious, joke.

For Max Temkin and Ben Hantoot — two of the eight high school friends who co-created and co-own the game equally — it's a good metaphor for how they run CAH. In comedy, as in business, Temkin says, your audience doesn't care about the details or the hard work behind the scenes, they just care about the end result.

cards against humanity game
cards against humanity game

(A black "Question" card and a white "Answer" card. Whichever player has the funniest "answer" to the question wins the hand.Wikimedia Commons)

And CAH happens to be both: With 30 employees and counting from its Chicago-area office, as well as lucrative retail deals with Amazon and Target, it's gone from Kickstarter sensation to thriving small business.

But it also happens to be one gigantic, ongoing comedy routine, created by people doing hard work behind the scenes to make sure the joke never gets old.

"You don't want to let people see you sweat," says Temkin.

The secret

According to Temkin, the secret to the Cards Against Humanity business model isn't at all complicated: "We sell a game for money, and we spend less than we make." Temkin says that this model has led the company to strong year-over-year growth, despite his constant fears that the "bottom is going to fall out" one of these days.

The other big factor in the success of CAH, says Temkin, is that it's an equal partnership between the eight cofounders, none of whom make the game their full-time gig.

The cofounders act as checks on each other, Temkin says, keeping the company focused on its very simple business model. For instance, Hantoot says that there were "factions" among the CAH partners who wanted a deal with a retailer like Target long ago — while others were afraid that such a deal would hurt the game's subversive image.