And it was Taihape farmer Ken Donovan on Monday who made the comparison between Clarke and Billy T James: to paraphrase, they nailed the comedic zeitgeist in their own confident, refreshing way.
Clarke's death this week, so soon after Murray Ball's, has been a kick in the guts.
Only 68, he was still producing the weekly mock interview for the ABC with his partner in crime Bryan Dawe. Sharp as a knife, Clarke and Dawe sliced through Australian public life with a humour that was gentle yet deadly accurate.
His mockumentry TV series The Games showed up the corruption and jobs for the boys ethos that surrounds such international events.
The Palmerston North native had a long career. He died tramping and bird watching.
Clarke's humour was never forced or crude. It didn't need to be; it was backed by intelligence, timing, wit and real skill. He didn't need to laugh at his own jokes, he just made two countries smile.