Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Dave Chappelle is the greatest comedian in America. Just ask him.
Dave Chappelle is the greatest comedian in America. Just ask him.
Oct 28, 2024 6:24 AM

The transgressive stand-up is back with another Netflix special, this time lecturing high school kids on the power of family and education. But is it funny?

Read More…

The edian America has produced in the post–Cold War era is Dave Chappelle, and if you listen to his new Netflix show, What’s in a Name: Speech at Duke Ellington School of the Arts, he’ll tell you that himself. I suppose it’s not bragging if it’s true, but it’s unusual for celebrities to proclaim the power they have over America, which usually cause it to be dispelled (think John Lennon’s “bigger than ment). For my part, I like Chappelle’s confidence—he at least sounds manlier than all the plaining about life’s injustices.

Chappelle feels he needs to assert some kind of authority after spending the past couple of years in fear that his home, progressive America, is trying to destroy him, his career, and his legacy because of mitment to transgender ideology. Chappelle likes to make jokes and, as a progressive himself, a believer in all the group identities proliferating in elite institutions, seems to believe you can kid people out of their prejudices. Unfortunately for him, he has discovered that for all his self-importance, he has run into something more terrifying than the injustices plains about in edy. After all, historical troubles don’t threaten his career or, indeed, that of any ic, given the American belief in freedom of speech and First Amendment jurisprudence that has protected artists until the wokies came along.

Last October, Chappelle published The Closer on Netflix, the last of his six-year, six-show deal with the streaming service, and had yet another amazing success. Everything he’s done has been watched by tens or hundreds of millions of people, and one expects that everyone involved is making fortune after fortune. Unfortunately for him, that doesn’t matter to our liberal elites—or rather, they hate it and they hate him for being popular, because they would like to impose totalitarian rule over the American mind and it’s proving unusually difficult to do with Chappelle speaking up monsense doubts and worries about transgender ideology. Chappelle has raised doubts in his act that hysterical activists have any claim to be heard on this issue—in The Closer, he pointed out that such people drove one of his transgender friends, edian he had helped professionally and got along with swell personally, to suicide. He’s making liberal conformism look both hysterical and despotic and more than a little suspicious morally and intellectually.

Liberal elites have reacted by denying his talent, by accusing him of fomenting violence through his words, and by attempting to ruin him, including through a media-fueled moralistic attack by Netflix employees on the corporation’s deal with Chappelle, which happily failed in getting him kicked off the platform.

Last November, the woke scolds had more success at his alma mater, a D.C. high school mostly for black kids, the Duke Ellington School of the Arts. Chappelle was supposed to return there to be applauded and dispense wisdom to some 600 aspiring artists, having accepted the school’s offer to name a theater for him in the hope of achieving fundraising goals and giving it, ostensibly, much-needed prestige. Instead, students were hysterical about his Closer special, indeed denunciatory on pretended moral grounds, and incredibly foolish, the way only the willing tools of liberal ideology can be. As a result, Chappelle was humiliated and withdrew his name from consideration for the new theater, all the while exhibiting the fabled liberal tolerance in reminding everyone that these are just misguided kids in the hands of media manipulation.

But he didn’t give up the fight and last month he returned to the school to give a 40-minute speech that was much better received (and is the subject of this new special). I guess they didn’t allow activists in this time; indeed, to watch the show you might even hope that that educational institution has in fact not been overtaken by woke despotism, but I myself am skeptical. Chappelle talks about how his youthful ambition to e edian started in his D.C. neighborhood barbershop, led him edy clubs, and then a high school for the arts, to learn how to act, which changed his life both by giving him an education in the general sense, allowing him to develop his natural talent, and by giving him a strength of character to promise his beliefs.

Chappelle now sounds like the most despised creature in our public life, an old-fashioned conservative: grumpy, defensive of some fond delusion concerning decency or manners, increasingly devoid of glamour, plaining about kids who show no respect or don’t work hard enough or don’t remember what it was like back in the day, etc., etc. Indeed, What’s in a Name is really his sketch of a bildungsroman, or “self-portrait of the artist as a young man.” As a professional autobiography, it is a fairly dignified answer to the contemptible genre of mencement speeches of the last generation. He talks about the help he received from generous yet harsh teachers who had authority and could afford to show kindness, and from an institution intent on teaching kids however it might hurt their feelings yet that allowed them the privacy required to make daring decisions.

I know the kind of teacher he has in mind and I understand that he means to extend authority from parents to education, to remind his audience that a school has to resemble a family. What is more reasonable than that the old should have authority over the young? Chappelle has recently talked more and more about the debt he owes his own parents for educating him to achieve his unusual success. Yet he is in no position to impose such an authority on anybody, and neither the young nor liberal elites will listen, given that, apparently, their only path to success is to destroy both him and the American freedom he has belatedly decided to stand for. Indeed, the very basis of his appeal from weakened educational institutions to the natural authority of the family is in danger. Chappelle talks about how he became serious about his work by ing a husband and a father. What could this mean to the young now, rich or poor, who don’t have much family, aren’t married, and rarely have kids, and this in unprecedented numbers?

Perhaps seeing the weakness of both the family and the school, munities that make private life in America tolerable if not happy, Chappelle changes his argument in the course of What’s in a Name to its final, far more individualistic form, to stand on the ground of “artistic freedom and expression,” his chosen new name for the theater. So his appeal to his own celebrity is much more of a last stand than an introduction to some impressive new plan.

I’m not sure whether the title of his speech/special is a reference to his own name, now spat upon with frequency, or to the change of names insisted on by transgender discourse, the mandment of the only faith that can animate American elites in our time. Chappelle seems fairly confident that he’s an adult, a man—strong, reasonable, and charitable to others—superior yet always helping. In the context of elite America, he really is a noble man and I am for him. He might end up a martyr, but I’m not quite sure a martyr to what. Art is not enshrined in the U.S. Constitution and mand much respect in our public life. Artists don’t change the ideologies of our parties or the preferences of the electorate.

The First Amendment defends not the scandals of entertainment but the core of our private and public lives, religion and politics, which naturally involves speech and disagreement. Chappelle, who turned to Islam in his moment of worst public humiliation, should know that. edy is unimportant, not to say defenseless. He speaks almost as a politician—what we call a public figure or a leader—not as an artist when he makes his serious rather ic argument. But what is his party? Does he not lose his art the moment his pel him to edy and argue with a straight face? Inspirational speeches are all the rage in our times, but they are artless, dubious, and short-lived. His argument doesn’t even explain why a man with his beliefs would be ic, except by suggesting he wants to somehow transform America into a more just regime, yet without confronting either the people or the elites, with whom he actually identifies to a great extent. This is bound to fail and, precisely by aiming at justice and not the joke, helps put an end edy, an art already almost lost in America.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Olasky on Politics and Natural Disasters
I got a copy of Marvin Olasky’s The Politics of Disaster: Katrina, Big Government, and a New Strategy for Future Crisis in the mail today, fittingly enough on the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s devastating storm surge. Olasky, among many other roles, is a senior fellow at the Acton Institute. You can expect a review of the book to appear here in the near future. Olasky blogs over at the World Magazine Blog. Update: Related interview with Olasky at NRO here....
Sirico on Capitalism and the Common Good
Rev. Robert A. Sirico, president of the Acton Institute, will address “Capitalism and the Common Good: The Ten Pillars of the Moral Economy” on September 14, 2006, at The University Club of Chicago. Join Rev. Sirico as he examines ten features of market economy that often are viewed as disruptive, but in actuality are positive forces in forming the cultural, moral and behavior traits most often associated with virtue, responsibility, and good society. Reserve your spot here today. ...
Broadband Abroad
The editors of PC World magazine have done a little survey of how users around the world access the Internet, based on the responses of over 60 worldwide publications that “either carry the PC World name or are associated with us in some way.” You can check out the piece here. Here’s a brief summary of some of the interesting findings: Our colleagues report that many countries are substantially ahead of the United States in many respects. For example, in...
The Vatican Offers Helpful Insights on Culture
The secularized West is experiencing a growing disaffection with both militant atheism and traditional Christian faith. The Vatican recently addressed this issue in a study published by the Pontifical Council for Culture. It is more than interesting to me to see how this document begins to address this problem. It suggests that any effective pastoral strategy must begin with seeing “the importance of witnessing the beauty of being a person loved by God.” This document, titled “The Christian Faith at...
An Army of Samaritans
The fable “The Blind Men and the Elephant” offers great insight about how Americans seem to perceive how charity and public welfare is done. Remember that depending on his placement around the elephant, each blind man had a different perspective, i.e., the guy on the tail had a much different perspective than the one grabbing the elephant’s trunk. We get a lot of contradictory messages in the media. People are giving more to charity than ever before or charities can’t...
Green Atomic Power
As I’ve written before, you don’t need to be a climate change convert to believe that nuclear power represents a very attractive alternative to nonrenewable fossil fuels. In this lengthy piece in Cosmos magazine, Tim Dean examines the possibility of nuclear reactors based on thorium rather than uranium. Regardless of your position on climate change, and Dean certainly makes it a key point in his article, the essential reality is that “fossil fuels won’t last forever. Current predictions are that...
Woods on Raising Resources
The Indiana Youth Institute will present the workshop “Raising Resources for Faith-Based Youth-Serving Organizations” from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 6 at the League for the Blind and Disabled, 5821 S. Anthony Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN 46816. The workshop will feature Karen Woods, director of the Center for Effective Compassion, which is a part of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty. Cost of the program is $20; to apply for the session, call 1-800-343-7060 or...
Welfare Reform is Working
Anthony Bradley, a research fellow for the Acton Institute, looks back on the effects of the welfare reform of 1996. Many people criticized this legislation as it was being passed and predicted that the result would be increased poverty. However, the results of the legislation have been overwhelmingly positive. Poverty, especially amongst single mothers, has declined significantly. Employment among people formerly claiming welfare has increased dramatically. The number of welfare cases has dropped from 4.3 to 1.89 million — that’s...
“Away the Ocean Rangers!”
Here’s a supply-side economics lesson that’s going to be learned the hard way by some folks up in Alaska. Away the "Ocean Rangers!” Alaska voters Aug. 22 were poised to approve an initiative that imposes a series of new taxes and environmental regulations on the cruise ships that bring about 1 million passengers a year to the state. With 87 percent of Alaska precincts reporting, the initiative was passing by a margin of 52.4 percent to 47.6 percent, according to...
Changing Culture, Not Politics, Changes Human Behavior
In 1936 Congress passed the Aid to Dependent Children Act to help widows stay home and raise their children. From 147,000 families on welfare in 1936 the number rose to five million by the 1994, the peak year. Ten years ago today, August 26, President Clinton signed into law the Welfare Reform Act. Last year the number of families receiving welfare had declined to 1.9 million. Contrary to the cries against the bill in 1996, which were numerous, the reform...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved