(I'm not exactly sure if this is appropriate...it might be a tad borderline, but I'll remove or edit if needed.)
A college professor, as an experiment, divided his class into two groups, one of all men, and one of all women. He then put each group into a seperate room.
The professor entered the room with the men and asked them as a group, "Who is in charge, men or women?"
With such a vague question, the men agreed to reply, "Men are in charge, but we like to let the women think they're in charge."
The professor then went into the room with the women and asked them the same question.
The women talked amongst themselves for a long while before their elected representative replied, "Women are in charge, but we like to let the men think they're in charge."
The professor then snuck back into the room with the men and listened to what they were talking about while he was away. The group's conversations consisted of video games, sports, and sex.
The professor then went into the room with the women, who noticed him immediately, but didn't say anything. He noted that their conversations consisted of clothes, shoes, politics, books, tv dramas, education, children, video games, sports, and sex.
After concluding the experiment and bringing both groups back into the same room, one of the women asked, "What was the point of this experiment?"
The professor replied, "I wanted to know what the difference was between men and women."
"And what did you find out?" asked a few of the students.
"Well," said the professor with a smile, "The only difference that I can see is that women are almost exactly like men, except that they actually use their heads."
(Retyped this from memory. My communications teacher told it to the class the other day. Enjoy.)