Comedian Dave Chappell, who hosted a “Saturday Night Live” called after the election in favor of President-elect Joe Biden, taught his loneliness by reflecting on his grandfather who was his slave.
Chapel said that after freeing his grandfather, he dedicated his life to education, Jesus and freedom for black people. The comedian mentioned his relationship because he said he thought about it all day as soon as the election was called, wanting his ancestors to see how well his grandchildren did in the show business.
“If he could see me now, he would probably say, ‘This N —- has bought and sold more than I have,'” he laughed at the moment, which made a sharp start, though a thoughtful stand-up bit. The comedian used the word n at least twice in a performance censored by NBC.
The first “SNL” after the 2020 election. Chappell’s performance on the show – which was no joke about Biden – increased his hosting joke when it helped calm the minds of liberals who were worried about Trump’s presidency after New York. The businessman defeated Hillary Clinton.
“I’m going to give him a chance,” the comedian said of Trump at the time.
S.N.L. CNN by opening the cold. Balance will win, Trump’s vote-counting complaints are.
Four years later, Chappell felt less inclined to give the president a second chance but felt sympathy from disillusioned Trump supporters.
Which did not stop him from making fun of the President.
“Now Trump is gone,” Chappell said before joking about Trump’s reaction to the coronavirus, adding that when they heard the president call him “kung-flu,” he told himself, “I have to say it, not you. It’s wrong when you say it.”
He also recalled when Trump messed up about the effect of the disinfectant if injected into the body in any way to fight the virus.
“The Secret Service will now have to be child-proof of the White House,” he joked. “He’s trying to drink bleach!”
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Chappell said that when Trump contracted the coronavirus, news outlets reported everything about him except that he was “happy.” He compared it to the late Queen singer Freddie Mercury getting AIDS.
“No one was like, ‘How did you get it?'” Chappell said.
He added that Trump actually had a “good health care plan” that took him from home to hospital in a house lip ter. And after he returned from the hospital, Chappell joked, Trump “went inside the house and killed four more people.”
The comedian also compared Trump to telling Americans not to “determine your life” with the virus, with a person eating a burger at a homeless shelter, and not letting a homeless person determine their own life by starvation.
“What kind of man makes sure he’s okay when his friends fight four lives in his life?” He asked angrily, referring to the death of former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain from the virus and the time of former New Jersey government Chris Christie in the ICU.
Regarding the election, Chappell told the audience that it is good to be a “humble winner” when they are the first “SNL” after Trump’s 2016 victory. Reminds them when to host.
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“Remember how bad it felt?” He said.
Any white people in the country who are struggling and feel like no one cares or the police officers they serve are treated with disrespect by the communities they serve, he said, “I know how it feels.”
He added that while some people hate others because they feel no one cares about them, “I don’t hate anyone.” “I just hate that feeling,” he said.
And as he urged Trump to remain calm after the 2016 election, the comedian insisted on forgiveness four years later.
The Associated Press contributes to this report.