Dave Chappelle — "“If you're going to come for me, you better come correct.”"
“If you're going to come for me, you better come correct.”
“If you're going to come for me, you better come correct.”
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"“I'm not saying the trans community is wrong. I'm saying I don't understand it.”"
"You can't please everybody. So you might as well please yourself."
"I would go to work on the show and I felt awful every day, that's not the way it was. I felt like some kind of prostitute or something. If I feel so bad, why keep on showing up to this place? I'm goin…"
"I'm not a criminal. I'm a comedian who pushes boundaries."
"I'm not perfect. I'm just me."
American comedian whose Chappelle's Show (2003-2006) reshaped 21st-century comedy and whose 2010s-2020s Netflix specials triggered debates over comedy and offense. Closely associated with Richard Pryor (predecessor in race-and-language American stand-up) and Eddie Murphy (1980s SNL trailblazer). For an intellectual contrast, see Hannah Gadsby, Australian comedian and Nanette creator — Nanette (2018) explicitly attacks the stand-up tradition Chappelle works within and treats traditional punchline comedy as a structure of power. Nanette and Chappelle's Sticks & Stones are the two most-discussed comedy specials of the late-2010s, taking opposite positions on whether stand-up structurally enables or excuses harm.
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