8:46 - Dave Chappelle

You left black folks to be a coon.
He came Ohio to chill the fuck out. If I remember correctly, he bought this Farm in the early 2000s. He called it the fuck Hollywood Farm

The farm was all paid off, taxes and everything so if Hollywood ever pull the rug from underneath them he could always fall back to that. Dave said that in an interview somewhere

You Can't Hide Away in DC or New York or LA. Ohio is slow for those who like slow. I can't knock him for that even if you were probably being sarcastic
 
He came Ohio to chill the fuck out. If I remember correctly, he bought this Farm in the early 2000s. He called it the fuck Hollywood Farm

The farm was all paid off, taxes and everything so if Hollywood ever pull the rug from underneath them he could always fall back to that. Dave said that in an interview somewhere

You Can't Hide Away in DC or New York or LA. Ohio is slow for those who like slow. I can't knock him for that even if you were probably being sarcastic

My post was referring to Rembrandt Brown

.
 
Dave Chappelle’s 8:46 Is Powerful But Not Quite Perfect
By Craig Jenkins@CraigSJ

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Dave Chappelle in his new stand-up set. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix Is A Joke/YouTube
Every now and then an artist comes along and changes their field so completely that their fingerprints seem present in everything that comes afterward. John Carpenter’s Halloween birthed many decades of creeping, suspenseful shots of horror-movie killers stalking their prey, picking off decadent, unsupervised teenagers one by one in locations conveniently out of reach of parents and police. Jimi Hendrix’s Are You Experienced? led generations of electric guitar players to wield their instrument like a chainsaw, cutting through blues-rock grooves with stabs of guttural noise where his predecessors staged a more mannered attack. Remembrances of Kobe Bryant in the wake of the Laker legend’s untimely passing in the winter illustrated the influence not just of Kobe on basketball, but also of Dave Chappelle on millennials. The “Love Contract” sketch from Chappelle’s Show is half the reason people yell “Kobe!” when they throw anything at a basket, on the court or off. It’s one of a dozen tics and catchphrases we’ve forgotten we take after the comedian. (The “Racial Draft” gag resurfaces nearly every time a black celebrity loses the plot, as does Rick James’s “cocaine is a helluva drug” line, for many of the same reasons.) Chappelle’s piercing clarity with regard to matters of race and his ability to illustrate the absurdity of the American experience through calculated exaggeration are his great gifts to 21st century thought. They’ve bled into the way we think and the way we speak.
You can’t stay cutting-edge forever. Chappelle’s retreat to the Ohio plains at the height of the success of his show, and his subsequent return to stand-up a decade later, are a clinic in the ways a lacerating wit can rust and the danger of receding into the comforts of an echo chamber. Jokes about transgender women in recent specials cast the comic, once a hero of the underdog, as an establishment figure of a sort, punching down in the ways his work used to ridicule and detest. Doubling down when criticized put him in the league of millionaire comics who don’t get that their anxiousness to fight this generation means the tables have turned.
More fascinating than their objections to a changing world is their inability to see themselves as the old guard. They’re pining for simpler times, but what made those times simple is the dearth of outlets where people could express themselves. (Those glory days were marred by fines and complaints from angry politicians and parents; veteran comics’ habit of saying the era of “family values” conservatives was a better time for free speech than the present is a lie deserving of its own essay.) The latter-day Chappelle specials are brilliant, but also distractingly fixated on people who don’t love every joke in the absence of any demonstrable blowback for critics’ objections, a problem haunting every comic who pauses a set to complain to an audience of admirers about other people who don’t admire them. It’s a funny paradox. Either you care or you don’t. You’re not unbothered if you keep checking the comments.
This month, Chappelle made history by releasing the first official stand-up show footage performed to a socially-distanced audience since the COVID-19 crisis closed clubs across the country. 8:46 is a clip released Thursday night from Dave Chappelle & Friends: A Talk with Punchlines, an event held in Ohio a week ago on June 6. It deals with the fallout from the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis last month and the protests in 50 states and around the world demanding racial justice and government action to curb police brutality. It’s Chappelle’s most poignant material in ages. The outrage is pure and unfiltered, more like a stressed-out bar hang or a video essay using historical parallels to illustrate what is acutely agonizing about 2020 than a gig meant to draw laughs. “This isn’t funny at all,” he says at one point, overwhelmed by the heaviness of his subject matter.

What’s different this time is that he’s almost exclusively boxing upward, or at least sideways, now. The targets are police violence and cable news personalities trying to make sense of the day’s malaise. Conservative pundit Candace Owens catches hell for kowtowing to the alt-right. (The riff about Owens spent a little too much time showering her with nonspecific locker-room jabs and not enough spelling out what’s uniquely insipid about a black media figure swooping onto a story about police violence demonizing the dead and denying race as a factor in police brutality, performing equality for the sake of appealing to the white Republican gaze.) Don Lemon gets smoke for trying to shame celebrities into speaking up. Chappelle’s defense is sound. We know where he stands. The movement doesn’t need celebrity platitudes. The unveiling of the “I Take Responsibility” campaign, where famous white actors laid it on thick about privilege, happened earlier in the day, exemplifying the cloying corn that can come from forcing rich people to take a stand.
It was almost perfect. Overnight, an eagle-eyed Twitter user noticed a discrepancy between the closed captioning and the audio and video of the 8:46 performance, which currently lives on Netflix’s comedy channel on YouTube, specifically in the section on Don Lemon. At the 7:45 mark in the audio and video, Chappelle calls the CNN host’s show a “hotbed of reality” with a laugh, takes a sip of his drink, then the camera cuts to the audience and back to him telling the story about being called out on the air for his presumed silence on Minneapolis. The clip posted to Twitter shows a riff in the closed captioning that isn’t present in the video: “Don Lemon is a funny newscaster because he’s clearly gay, but … he’s the anomaly. He’s black and gay, but unlike my other black and gay friends, he’s got this weird self-righteousness …” Then it shows Chappelle preparing to do an impression of the anchor, which tracks with the silly voice he puts on at the 7:48 mark as he begins to recount what Lemon said on the air, which would suggest that a portion of the joke was cut that stayed in the closed captioning. By morning, as the clip spread on Twitter, captioning on 8:46 was disabled. Later in the day it was restored, but the words jump ahead of Chappelle by one line right at the section in question. (Vulture reached out to Netflix and is still awaiting comment.)
What happened here? What changed in a week? Is Chappelle just incapable of going 30 minutes onstage without proclaiming that he doesn’t get what makes queer folks tick but suddenly net-savvy enough to know to filter himself now? Or did he pull those lines because he’s beginning to see the light, because it undercuts his message about the chilling consistency of black pain and disenfranchisement across centuries to single out one subdivision of black man for ridicule? Whatever the case, Chappelle in middle age still mirrors his audience. We’re coming together, and fast nowadays; we still have a ways to go.

@fonzerrillii @ViCiouS @godofwine @largebillsonlyplease

what ya'll think of this review?

Bloated
You don't have to hit the max word count
 
It does but they police and their handlers make it a top priority to keep it
quiet and swept under the rug, many times they stage it to look like something
else (gang related, random shooting ect..) you gotta use your third eye, no way they are sweeping shit like rape and murder under the rug and they are not covering up
what they consider internal insurrection.








America looks clean on the surface but if you lift up that rug :smh: I can't prove it but it ain't hard to believe these departments would do anything to keep internal backlash out of the news, and "friendly fire" any officers that try it or even seem like they are going to try it. :smh:
Brother Dick Gregory said Amerikkka is like an unwashed whore with a new dress on.
 
Give the board credit, most are intelligent enough to know that there's a time and place for everything. In Dave's special wasn't the time to refer to every Black man as "Nigga", especially George Floyd.
Especially in front of a mixed/and or white audience..IMO it doesn't sound OR feel right/appropriate.
 
What you just saw was a man with enough courage to say fuck fame and what you think of me. He knows his worth and understands his power. He’s one of the few black men who can tell any race to shut up and listen and they do—so he does.
 
Agree with everything Rob said, but I can't rock with him on his Dane Cook comment..i dont think he was ever funny..but thats me..

No one on this board probably thinks Dane Cook is funny, but he had a run where he was probably the most popular comedian for a couple of years.

At the same token, no other current comedian is funny according to BGOL. :confused:
 
Dave Chappelle’s ‘8:46’ Packs 400 Years Into 30 Minutes
The comic’s voice is as eloquent as ever in his surprise Netflix special discussing race in America

So much of Dave Chappelle’s power lies in his voice. In the 20 years since his first hour-long stand-up special, as he has spoken eloquently, brilliantly, even sloppily about race, his metaphorical voice has been singularly influential. But it’s his literal voice that harnesses so much of his strength. Chappelle’s jokes nestle in inflection — in his tonal changes and the spaces between them.

Think about his truly iconic comedic moments. “I’m Rick James, bitch” is defiant, with enough of a space and deep breath before the “bitch” to drive it home. “Where is Ja?!” is even, loud, and exasperated. “I’m not a ******, either” from the Netflix special Sticks & Stones is soft, cocky, and fully aware of the fact that he’s driving his point home perfectly. Chappelle has worked his vocal inflections to the point that just him raising his voice ever so slightly gives the crowd the cue that that a joke is coming. He knows this; it’s why he takes us on rides solely with the use of sound, building anticipation with each elevated octave before the crescendo of his nigh-squeak.

That’s why Chappelle’s latest “comedy” special for Netflix — 8:46, a sitcom-length stand-up ruminating on the death of George Floyd and race in America — is such a jarring watch. The special starts with some lighthearted banter about the impending discomfort audiences can expect from him. The laughs are scattered, partly because the crowd is scattered — socially distanced outdoors as a reminder that through this all there is a damn pandemic going on.

Then, just before the six-minute mark, Chappelle starts to deploy his vocal magic.

“Who. Are. You. Talking. To?” he says, addressing the MPD officers. “What are you signifying? That you can kneel on a man’s neck.” He gets on his knee to replicate the way Dereck Chauvin kneeled on George Floyd’s neck and his voice rises. “For eight minutes! And 46 seconds! And feel like you wouldn’t get the wrath of God.” It’s the signature Chappelle rising action and climax. But there’s no joke. No punchline. It’s dead-ass serious. Even his yelling is different: There’s an added rattle at the back of his throat. A guttural growl that we’ve never quite heard from him before. His fists are balled up. The master of making a stage feel like his living room, of having audiences in the palm of his hand, has finally lost control of his emotions.

Or maybe he’s as in control as ever. Maybe Chappelle is giving us insight into his real emotions to drive home the gravity of the fight for Black lives. The audience is as unsure as I am watching at home; you can feel them expecting a punchline and feeling the weight of its absence. The heaviness is suffocating. For the audience. For Chappelle. For America.

What follows is a history lesson full of rage and passion from one of the most captivating people to ever hold a microphone on a stage. Chappelle takes us through a history lesson on Eric Garner, the Black Panthers, Chris Dorner, and the Black lives lost in between. The true jokes are few and far between — though his blasting Candace Owens and Laura Ingraham is a welcome, hilarious release — but Chappelle is still as enthralling as when he’s unloading an arsenal of jokes.

One of the criticisms of Chappelle since his return to the public eye is his need to center himself in so many topics. That has caused blind spots in his speaking and has sullied his name for large swaths of fans who adored him. Chappelle still centers himself at times here, even as he defers to young movement leaders as the folks who have pushed the country to the brink of change.

For example, he notes that he can’t get 8:46 out of his mind because that’s the time he was born. He can’t get Kobe’s death out of his head because eight and 24, Kobe’s two numbers, are the day Chappelle was born. He feels intimately attached to the life and death of Chris Dorner because the slain former LAPD officer name-checked Chappelle in his manifesto before going on his spree.

Yet, ironically, placing himself at the center of the narrative works here. It shows the way we internalize these traumas we witness, how we’re unable to shake them away. Black folks all see ourselves in George Floyd, because we know he could be any of us on any given day. That’s the reality of Blackness in America. Chappelle drives that point home even harder when he reminds us that he was pulled over by the cop who would go on to kill John Crawford in a Walmart the next day. It’s a painful reminder that our skin color puts us in proximity to unjust death.

Dave Chappelle is the preeminent voice of this generation’s cis-het Black man. That means he often comes with the transphobic, misogynous language that stops us all from being free, even as he speaks with surgical precision about the way racism wraps its calloused hands around the necks of Black men across the country. It should be noted that he doesn’t mention Breonna Taylor, whose name has been yelled across the country by those not wanting her to be overshadowed by protests over dead Black men. In fact, he doesn’t mention any Black women killed by police in the entire stand-up. In that regard, there’s still a massive amount of work to do. And it’s understandable if people, fed up with his past antics, won’t kneel at the altar of his exceptionalism.

But the special is a reminder why he has captivated a generation of Black folks, of Black men especially, for better or worse. He can speak to the pain of Blackness in America, the anger, and the twisted beauty of what it takes to survive. Through all the agony in his voice, his echoing quote is a message of congratulations and encouragement even in the midst of bodies he reminds us. “We’re not desperate for heroes in the Black community,” he says. “Any nigga that survives this nightmare is my goddamn hero.”

And therein is the Chappelle experience. Through the gritted teeth, the tears, and the despair, he still finds a way to make us smile.

 
What you just saw was a man with enough courage to say fuck fame and what you think of me. He knows his worth and understands his power. He’s one of the few black men who can tell any race to shut up and listen and they do—so he does.
He walked away from 50 mill so he already solidified himself at goat tier and no easily bought
 
No one on this board probably thinks Dane Cook is funny, but he had a run where he was probably the most popular comedian for a couple of years.

At the same token, no other current comedian is funny according to BGOL. :confused:

Well yeah, but there was also a time when D4L had the most popular song in America as well...

But I dont find Jerry Seinfeld funny either...like i said..thats me
 
Well yeah, but there was also a time when D4L had the most popular song in America as well...

But I dont find Jerry Seinfeld funny either...like i said..thats me

I don’t find Dane or Jerry funny, but I can’t deny their popularity and their runs in comedy. :dunno:
 
I don’t find Dane or Jerry funny, but I can’t deny their popularity and their runs in comedy. :dunno:


Absolutely. People find Tiffany Hadish funny, I'm not hating on her or them, but it's not my cup of tea...I dont particularly care for Tom Brady, but I can't deny how good he is..same difference..
 
Absolutely. People find Tiffany Hadish funny, I'm not hating on her or them, but it's not my cup of tea...I dont particularly care for Tom Brady, but I can't deny how good he is..same difference..

Very true and again, I’m not arguing their funniness. I’m just stating that even though we don’t believe they’re funny, we can’t deny their popularity/run at the time.

And yes, Dane Cook was wack.
 
He came Ohio to chill the fuck out. If I remember correctly, he bought this Farm in the early 2000s. He called it the fuck Hollywood Farm

It's even deeper than that. Yellow Springs is his second home. His father taught at Antioch and that's where he spent his summers. He bought his home there when his father started to get sick which was quite a few years before Chappelle Show.

Antioch has history.

Notable alumni:
Virginia Hamilton
Leon Higginbotham Jr.
Coretta Scott King
Elenor Holmes Norton
Dr. Frances Cress Welsing
 
This is a thread about Dave, why do you find it necessary to shit on Kevin?

Dave even touched on this in the special. He literally just said the shit. Even threw it back to the "Where's Ja Rule?" joke.

The people are speaking for themselves, listen to them. Like we don't need the celebrities to speak, we don't NEED Kevin Hart to say some shit.

Just because they're celebrities, doesn't mean they need to be heard. A lot of celebrities need to be shutting the fuck up because they put their foot in their mouth every time they do because they're so comfortable where they're at, they're kind of out of touch with the issues of the common man.

Lil' Wayne trying to act like racism don't exist. Terry Crews peddling "anti-black supremacy." Most of them are either 1) too goofy and out of touch, or 2) too in-pocket to do anything but straddle the fence, or 3) just straight up coonin'.

That ain't never been Kevin's lane anyway, so why expect him to do the shit now?

This is Dave's bag. Let Dave do Dave.
 
Dave even touched on this in the special. He literally just said the shit. Even threw it back to the "Where's Ja Rule?" joke.

The people are speaking for themselves, listen to them. Like we don't need the celebrities to speak, we don't NEED Kevin Hart to say some shit.

Just because they're celebrities, doesn't mean they need to be heard. A lot of celebrities need to be shutting the fuck up because they put their foot in their mouth every time they do because they're so comfortable where they're at, they're kind of out of touch with the issues of the common man.

Lil' Wayne trying to act like racism don't exist. Terry Crews peddling "anti-black supremacy." Most of them are either 1) too goofy and out of touch, or 2) too in-pocket to do anything but straddle the fence, or 3) just straight up coonin'.

That ain't never been Kevin's lane anyway, so why expect him to do the shit now?

This is Dave's bag. Let Dave do Dave.

Agreed
 
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