Dave ChappelleĀ dropped a surprise new Netflix special on Friday night, where he spoke candidly about Charlie Kirk, American politics and his recent performance at the Riyadh Comedy Festival in Saudi Arabia.
The special, titled Dave Chappelle: The Unstoppableā¦, was filmed in his hometown of Washington, D.C., in October, and landed on the service without much warning following the Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua fight.
Taking the stage in a camo jacket with Colin Kaepernickās name and number on the back, Chappelle declared, āWeāve got a lot to talk about,ā and explained he wanted to come back to Washington, D.C., after Trump deployed the National Guard to the city. āTheyāre trying to take the chocolate out of Chocolate City. I said, āIāve got to go home while itās still a city I remember,’ā he told the crowd. āAnd I came here mad, ready to fight, but when I drove through the city ā it looks clean guys, Iāve got to tell you.ā
He then went deep on his decision to perform in Saudi Arabia, acknowledging āIāve been getting a lot of griefā and specifically calling out Bill Maher: āIāve never said this publicly but fuck that guy. Iām so fucking tired of his little smug, cracker-ass commentary.ā
Chappelle declared, āI donāt feel guilty at allā and continued, āThese motherfuckers act like because I did a comedy festival in Saudi Arabia I somehow betrayed my principles⦠They said, āWell, Saudi Arabia killed a journalistā and rest in peace Jamal Khashoggi. Iām sorry that he got murdered in such a heinous fashion. And also, look bro, Israelās killed 240 journalists in the last three months so I didnāt know yāall were still counting.ā
He reiterated his past statement that āitās easier to talk in Saudi Arabia for me than it is in America,ā saying he was nearly canceled in the U.S. several years ago for his jokes about the trans community. The comedian added, āBut Iāve gotta tell you something ā transgender jokes went over very well in Saudi Arabia,ā while joking that he no longer works at Netflix and his new job is to āsit by the phone and wait for them Arabs to call me.ā
Chappelle also cited Jimmy Kimmelās recent suspension as an example of free speech being limited in the U.S., and coyly suggested he made $6 million for the appearance.
āIāll take money from Saudi Arabia any day just so I can say no over here. It feels good to be free,ā he continued. āAnd I know that the people in Saudi Arabia canāt say all the things that I was allowed to say. But a dealās a deal, and the king said that I could say these things. So I looked at it like I was on a diplomatic mission: Iāve gotta bring pussy jokes to the Middle East.ā
Later in the show, Chappelle commented on Charlie Kirkās assassination, saying, āThis is another reason itās hard to talk in America, because if you talk for a living and see Charlie Kirk get murdered that way, Iām gonna be honest, I was shook.ā He added that when initial (later walked back) reports came out that trans messages were inscribed on the bullets shot at Kirk, āI was at home like, āOh no! Iām dead as fried chicken.’ā The comedian also noted that people were saying, āCharlie Kirk is this generationās Martin Luther King. No, heās not. Thatās a reach. They both got murdered in a terrible fashion, they both got shot in the neck, but thatās about where those similarities end.ā
Throughout the set, Chappelle touched on Sean Combs being sentenced to prison, saying that, āWhen I got attacked in L.A. at the Hollywood Bowl, people forget that Puff was the guy that tackled my attacker. He saved my life,ā and itās āhard to be mad at him after that.ā He also said of Combsā ex-girlfriend Cassie, who testified during the trial, āGod bless her. Iām not making light of her; what she went through was terrible.ā
Chappelle closed the show by telling the crowd, āD.C., no matter how much this government or anyone else puts pressure on you, keep your wits about you. Iām here just to remind you that we are a community and we will stay sane together. We will take care of each other, and we will waitā Trump out. He added that he was worried his voice would be co-opted, and wanted a code word so that he could signal to fans that people had gotten to him. āItās got to be something that I would never say ā oh, I know what the code is. The code word is, āI stand with Israel.’ā

