Dave Chappelle comes across as a bigger idiot in his phony defiant statement about his recent controversial special, |
Guess who wants to be back in the news and I know I am going to get grief from my own for covering it. Some seem to think that if I don't give him any attention, he will go away. Uh uh. That's not how it works. Since I have a platform, albeit more minor than his, I will do my best to speak for the folks who are being bullied by him because they aren't celebrities and thus don't have thousands of people groveling at their feet and feeding on their every word. They are just folks trying to live their daily lives as best as they can.
Dave Chappelle is talking about the controversy he started with his Netflix special. In the special, he attacked the transgender community and erased the lives of black LGBTQ people in order to make his attacks seem justifiable via the tired black people vs. LGBTQ people narrative. He got a lot of people calling him out. Also, probably because he's a celebrity, he has a lot of individuals supporting him. Trans employees of Netflix staged a protest last week to call him and Netflix out.
Chappelle addressed this in a video he put out:
Chappelle remained unapologetic about the special — which was accused of containing transphobic and homophobic remarks and led to a walkout at Netflix — saying: “I said what I said.” “It’s been said in the press that I was invited to speak to the transgender employees of Netflix and I refused. That is not true — if they had invited me I would have accepted it, although I am confused about what we would be speaking about,” Chappelle said in the video. “I said what I said, and boy, I heard what you said. My God, how could I not? You said you want a safe working environment at Netflix. It seems like I’m the only one that can’t go to the office anymore.”
“I want everyone in this audience to know that even though the media frames it that it’s me versus that community, that is not what it is. Do not blame the LBGTQ [sic] community for any of this shit. This has nothing to do with them. It’s about corporate interests and what I can say and what I cannot say,” Chappelle said. “For the record, and I need you to know this, everyone I know from that community has been loving and supporting, so I don’t know what all this nonsense is about.” Chappelle also spoke about his upcoming documentary about his summer 2020 comedy tour, claiming that it has now been excluded from film festivals. “This film that I made was invited to every film festival in the United States and some of those invitations I accepted. When this controversy came out about ‘The Closer,’ they began disinviting me from these film festivals,” Chappelle claimed. “And now, today, not a film company, not a movie studio, not a film festival, nobody will touch this film.. . .Though Chappelle said he was willing to meet with members of the trans community, he jokingly listed off a slew of conditions that would have to be met: “To the transgender community, I am more than willing to give you an audience, but you will not summon me. I am not bending to anybody’s demands. And if you want to meet with me, I’d be more than willing to, but I have some conditions. First of all, you cannot come if you have not watched my special from beginning to end. You must come to a place of my choosing at a time of my choosing, and thirdly, you must admit that Hannah Gadsby is not funny.”
**sigh**
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ReplyDeleteChagrin, Last year, 44 trans people were murdered in this country and the majority of that number were trans people of color. But supposedly Chappelle is the victim because members of that community call him out for using his huge platform to spew stereotypes which most likely played a part in those murders. This is about more than being butthurt. You see, you hide behind a name. Anyone who clicks your name can't see who you are. That makes you a coward and a hypocrite as you criticize me and mine about our supposed lifestyle choices and being butthurt. You are in no position to lecture me. Chagrin, you sound like a typical defender of Dave Chappelle in this instant - a nothing-happening nobody thinking that defending a celebrity will give him or her some sort of status. Bullies make people laugh, too. But at the expense of other people
ReplyDeleteAnother comedian, George Carlin, speaks better to the situation even though he died before it took place. In comedy you should not punch down, but punch up. There is no such thing as fair game when it comes to something like this. Comedy and bullying are concepts divided by very thin lines and when you - as Chappelle did - makes fun of an unfairly misunderstood and maligned community, that's bullying. It's not comedy.
And that makes you worse for defending him. Tell you what. Don't hide. Let everyone see who you are, then let everyone make fun of your deficiencies. Your possible big nose, ridiculous shape, maybe you have big ears or rotten teeth.
Or talk more about your family situation. Were you abused as a child? Do you have mental issues?
Tell me how you would feel is someone made fun of THOSE things. Don't get angry. It's just comedy. Or would you finally see that sort of thing as bully?