Anonymous wrote:I love Jon Stewart.
I love Dave Chappelle.
I love comedy the way some women love wine or shoes.
I’ve posted on other threads for years that smart comedians are our last defense to save America. They have a unique platform to openly discuss complex and sensitive topics in a way that isn’t off-putting. Perhaps more importantly, they are brave enough to speak out against censorship and cancel culture. Jon Stewart did that in the linked segment. Chappelle did that on SNL.
To be clear:
JS explained “the Jews” piece. It was trending on Twitter and linked to sports because of Kyrie’s comments. But JS essentially said the same thing as DC: nothing good comes after “the Jews.” JS used jokes about ice cream to make the point; Chappelle literally made the same point.
JS was not criticizing DC or his monologue. Not at all. In fact, he literally said we need to directly discuss the fact that there are a lot of Jewish people in Hollywood and banking.
All this to say, the two guys are on the same page. Any conversation between the two would not be a point/counterpoint. Rather, their discussion would focus on the need to shift away from woke cancel culture to allow people to speak openly and discuss their opinions without being attacked. It shouldn’t be that hard, yet it’s impossible…unless you are a famous comic brave enough/beloved enough to go there.
Yes they both agree about the phrase "the Jews", but the tone of the whole Jews in Hollywood and banking was much different. Chapelle definitely went in conspiracy direction without being overt and Stewart is clearly sick of the conspiracy implication. They agree that we need open discussion and things have gone too far with cancel culture;h however I think they both could learn a lot from eachother.