Dave Chappelle surprises fans with Netflix special after Joshua-Paul fight

0
2

Dave Chappelle is hitting the funny bone.

On Friday, the comedian, 52, revealed he was dropping a Netflix special called “Dave Chappelle: The Unstoppable…” immediately after the Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua fight.

“I wanted to shout out my hometown Washington D.C., and thank everybody that came out in October to support me at that show,” Chappelle told the crowd before the boxing match. “I just want you to know, that show will be streaming on Netflix tonight. After the fight, my new special drops, and I hope you love it. Thank you very much. Ah chicka chicka.”

Dave Chappelle during his new stand-up special . Instagram/@netflixisajoke
“Dave Chappelle: The Unstoppable…” is now airing on Netflix. Instagram/@netflixisajoke

Chappelle is no stranger to Netflix stand-up specials. The celebrity dropped “The Age of Spin,” “Deep in the Heart of Texas,” “Equanimity” and “Bird Revelation” in 2017.

“Equanimity” earned Chappelle an Emmy award.

Dave Chappelle performing. Instagram/@netflixisajoke

In 2021, he released “The Closer” and in 2023, “The Dreamer.”

And during his live shows, Chappelle doesn’t hold back.

Last February, Chappelle took to the stage for a stand-up show in San Francisco and told the audience that certain topics were off limits while he was doing his opening monologue at “SNL” a month prior.

“SNL producers told him he couldn’t speak about two topics: transgender people and Gaza,” SFGATE’s senior culture editor Dan Gentile reported at the time.

However, Chappelle still included a forbidden reference in his monologue.

“Do not forget your humanity, and please have empathy for displaced people whether they’re in the Palisades or Palestine,” he stated.

Dave Chappelle doing stand-up.

The four time “SNL” host joked to the audience during his stint in January that he was “tired of being controversial” and hoping to “turn over a new leaf.”

Then, in August, Chappelle debuted his COVID-era doc, “Dave Chappelle: Live In Real Life” at a film festival in Martha’s Vineyard.

Dave Chappelle in front of the packed crowd. Instagram/@netflixisajoke

The original release failed after he received backlash over 2021’s “The Closer.”

“I’ve gone on to get snubbed by the Grammys and the Emmys because someone thought it was a good idea to tell trans jokes,” Chappelle told the audience at the film festival, per Variety.

The LGBTQ+ community and multiple Netflix employees protested his special since it included jokes about transgender people.

Dave Chappelle speaks at the dedication of the theater at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington, D.C. on June 20, 2022. The Washington Post via Getty Images

In 2023, Chappelle took aim at the transgender community and people with disabilities again in the special “The Dreamer.”

In the special, he recounted the time he met Jim Carrey on the set of the 1999 film “Man on the Moon.”

The “Ace Ventura” star, 63, played the late Andy Kaufman in the comedy drama.

Dave Chappelle on “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

“I was very disappointed because I wanted to meet Jim Carrey and I had to pretend he was Andy Kaufman all afternoon. It was clearly Jim Carrey. I could look at him and clearly see it was Jim Carrey,” Chappelle explained.

“I say all that to say … that’s how trans people make me feel,” he quipped.

Later in the set, Chappelle expressed: “Tonight, I’m doing all handicapped jokes. They’re not as organized as the gays, and I love punching down.”

However, Netflix released a statement shortly after.

Dave Chappelle stands in a spotlight in Los Angeles in 2000. Getty Images

“We value our trans colleagues and allies, and understand the deep hurt that’s been caused,” a Netflix spokesperson said. “We respect the decision of any employee who chooses to walk out, and recognize we have much more work to do both within Netflix and in our content.”

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: nypost.com