VICE suggests YOU avoid watching DAVE CHAPPELE'S NEW NETFLIX SPECIAL ..SMH

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fukk vice.
:mjlol:





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Watched it. I think, that besides being funny, Dave raised some interesting questions that no one in this PC era wants to answer.

The only reason they'll hated his last four specials; YOU'RE NOT ALLOWED TO TALK ABOUT THAT

The Lebron James/WNBA joke, for example.

There's been like four stories of M-to-F Transkids smashing Girl's sports records and were told to just sit and watch :lupe:
 

RedCloakBlackWraithe

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It was so calculated even down to the point of the special being shot in Atlanta. Headquarters of lgbtq.

A bunch of layers to his material as usual

He really knocked it out the park

fam when that man said "there's a lot of gay men here with their wives" and the camera panned the audience and there was an eerie silence throughout....fukking hilarious!
 

ISO

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Crowd exploded when he said what he said it’s like he said what everyone wishes they could say but can’t say in this p*ssyfied, neoliberal, LGBT generation

The LeBron James in the WNBA shyt had me weak :russ:

Dave can say nikka all he wants but he says fakkit and it’s a problem to these network execs. We living in a age where corporate buildings and entire city blocks fly LGBT flags for LGBT month but would never put up a Panafrican flag for black history month.


I hope this leads to more push back against this bullshyt going on
 

AJD

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Chappelle is back and better than ever now making pasty ass crakkers and sickos mad. We need another special pronto Dave:mjgrin::umad:
 

DonRe

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That lgbtq shyt is really on point. They fukkin hate each other and any shine the other group gets. Like a dysfunctional family.

His impersonation of A asian guy in a black mans body had me crying.

It was kinda meh in the beginning. I feel like he talks about mj too much. Or maybe im just over that mj shyt.

Bit it was really good.
 

O.T.I.S.

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At least post the article so we won't have to give these fakkits clicks

Dave Chappelle made a return to Netflix Monday with a new stand-up special, Sticks & Stones. Fans quickly realized that, if you watch until the very end, the special has a secret epilogue called "The Punchline," where Chappelle answers questions from audience members who went to his separate Dave Chappelle on Broadway stand-up show last July. The special takes the comic's anti-wokeness schtick to a new level, and the whole thing is repetitive and exhausting enough that it's a slog to even make it to the Q&A.

Chapelle's controversial 2017 Netflix specials, like The Age of Spin: Dave Chappelle Live at the Hollywood Palladium and Equanimity and the Bird Revelation, honed his voice as a comedian wary of progressive criticism. That voice is even sharper in his latest special. At one point in his routine, he says he doesn't believe Michael Jackson molested young children. He continues by saying that if Jackson did, the children should've felt lucky their first time was with the King of Pop, adding, "Do you know how good it must've felt to go to school the next day after that shyt?" Chappelle also returned to his now-infamous obsession with making fun of trans people, saying, "[trans people] hate my fukking guts and I don't blame them. [...] I can't stop writing jokes about these nikkas." This time, those jokes included asking the audience how funny it would be if he was actually a Chinese person stuck inside a Black man's body, which (you guessed it) also included a racist impression of a Chinese person. He also found time to defend fellow controversial comedians Kevin Hart and Louis C.K., painting them as victims of an overzealous callout culture.

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By the time the Q&A plays at the end of the special, Chappelle has already shown his unapologetic approach to courting controversy. His answers put that into even starker view. He says that a white woman left one of his practice sets for the special at The Punchline comedy club in San Francisco, telling him, "I'm sorry, I was raped." Chappelle says he replied with "It's not your fault you were raped. But it's not my fault either. Ta-ta, bytch," to which the audience laughs raucously, as though that were a real punchline. He then followed with a story about sparking an unlikely friendship with a trans woman who he says "was laughing the hardest" out of anyone at the trans jokes in his practice set. The strange story of camaraderie seemed to highlight the common accusation that Chappelle is only interested in repairing his relationship with marginalized groups if he doesn't have to change anything about himself.

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Chappelle has always been a daredevil comedian willing to take a controversial stance or downplay a serious controversy for laughs, including his early-2000s skits about R. Kelly's court trials on Chappelle's Show. But now he chooses to blatantly ignore the historic criticism against his style of comedy and new loud-and-clear criticism from the trans community. His approach comes off like a defiant rejection of change at any cost. As he keeps going down this path, drawing attention to the worst aspects of his important career, the biggest cost will be tarnishing his own legacy.
 
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