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ïżœ]q (Xïżœ This is Dave. He tells dirty jokes for a living. That stare is where most of his hard work happens. It signifies a profound train of thought, the alchemistâs fire that transforms fear and tragedy into levity and livelihood. Dave calls that look âthe trance.â âȘ Play me âȘ âȘ Buy me âȘ âȘ Workinonit âȘ âȘ Tune up âȘ âȘ Tune âȘ âȘ Oh âȘ âȘ Fade me âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘ âȘ In every ghetto âȘ âȘ Ah-ah, ah-ah, ah-ah âȘqXh Thank you! Thank you very much! Thank you all. Oh, wow. That was exciting, wasnât it? Thank you, guys. Have a seat, feel comfortable, relax. I want to thank everyone in LA for a wonderful week. Itâs been great here. You know what? Itâs been ten years since the last time I played Los Angeles, if you can imagine. I know! I know, Iâve been gone for a very long time. And unbeknownst to you, it was a difficult ten years. Iâm not gonna take you through all the agony Iâve been through, but it was tough. Some of it you mightâve seen.1I donât know if you ever saw on TMZ the big headline: âDave Chappelle Drunk Onstage in Detroit.â Well, if you saw it, I wasnât drunk. I had smoked some reefer⊠with some rappers. Yeah. I donât know if you know anything about hanging out with rappers, but their weed is very strong, stronger than I what I was accustomed to. The article goes on to say I was booed offstage, which is also incorrect. I was booed. I did not leave. It was a long bomb. It was a fucking nightmare. Two puffs of weed, thatâs all it was. Two puffs. I never had that happen, where I take two puffs of weed, I looked at the guy next to me, I was like, âIâm gonna bomb, nigga. I can feel it.â And that guy called my name. âDave Chappelle!â Niggas was like⊠Normally, when you do a comedy showâ you guys donât know what it looks like up here, but niggas be just looking up at you like⊠Thatâs how the show started. Didnât take long for their faces to switch up like, âWhat the fuck?â They started looking amongst themselves. So I knew I wasnât doing good. I donât remember what I was saying. It just took one person to break the ice. It was a black lady with a Ford Motor shirt on. Stood up suddenly. âFuck you, Dave Chappelle!â I said, âExcuse me?â She said, âI worked all week for this shit, and this show sucks!â And in a weird act of racial harmony, a conservative white guy stood up and backed her up. âYeah!â The whole crowd banded together and started chanting, âWe want our money back! We want our money back!â I said, âOh, shit.â I snapped out of it. âGood people of Detroit, hear me. Hear me now. You will never get your fucking money back.â Fuck that. I said, âIâm like Evel Knievel. I get paid for the attempt. I didnât promise this shit would be good.â âBoo!â They said, âFuck you!â2This went on for a long time. And then, after the show, I felt so bad, I took half of the money from the showâ thousands of dollarsâ I said, âIâm gonna give this to charity.â You know what I did? I bought $25,000 worth of bubble gum and drove around Detroit and handed it out to the homeless so they could chew it and still be hungry. I was very mad at Detroit that night. Because not only did I bomb, I had to go back to the very same room the next night and do it all over again. Fucking nightmare.3That would be like if you were having sex with a woman and, for some reasonâ this would never happenâ but for some reason, she had a mousetrap in her pussy. You get caught in the trap. And then youâve got to fuck her again tomorrow night. Iâd still do it, but Iâd be careful the next time. The old mousetrap-in-the-pussy trick, eh? Fool me once. Yeah. Yeah, it was a tough time. And I wanted to give up sometimes. I almost did give up, but then, right before I gave up, I decided not to. But I made the call. They answered the phone. âHello? Dancing with the Stars.â I said, âNot yet. Not yet.â Yeah. If you see me on that shit, itâs over. Trust me. My spirit is broken. If you see me waiting for them judges⊠getting critiqued on my cha-cha, fuck that.qXïżœ Iâve been hanging out inâ I havenât been working in LA, but I come out here and hang out and shit. I was out here a few weeks ago. I almost got arrested. Iâm not bullshitting. This happens to a lot of black people. What happened was⊠I was coming out of one of those nightclubs in Hollywood, and my friend saw me. I guess I was wobbling or something. So, he just rolled up. Heâs a good friend of mine. Heâs like, âHey, Dave, give me the keys.â I was like, âAll right, nigga, just take the keys.â And I got in the passengerâs side of my car, and he drove it. It was fine. Just talking, chopping it up. And then, on the 10, the blue-and-whites hit us. Now, I should tell you, the friend that was driving me was black, which really doesnât have anything to do with the story other than to let you know there was fear in the car. Not my fear. Iâm black, but Iâm also Dave Chappelle. So, I figured, you know, shit will probably be fine. Traffic stop started off on the right foot. The cops came up to the driverâs side. âHi. How are you guys doing tonight?â And he recognized me immediately. âOh. Dave Chappelle.â And I looked at my friend like, âWeâre getting out of this shit.â And then he says, âYou guys were swerving in the lane. Do you mind just stepping out of the car for a second?â Still no cause for alarm. I looked through the rearview mirror. The body language of the arrest looked good. Just talking. So, then I started fucking with the radio. You know a traffic stop is going good if youâre listening to the radio when someone else is outside of the car. But then, when I looked back in the rearview mirror, something had gone horribly wrong. That motherfucker was back there like⊠And the next thing I knew, they were stuffing him in the back of the car, and I thought what anybody would think in a situation like that: âOh, my God. What is gonna happen to me?â And the police walked up to the window. âMr. Chappelle, we had to arrest your friend. He refused to take our breathalyzer test.â I said, âThat motherfucker. Not complying? Thatâs odd. So, officer, whatâs gonna happen to me?â âYouâre fine. Weâre just gonna have to ask you to step out of the car so we can impound the vehicle, and weâll arrange for you to have a ride home.â I said, âOh, well, no. I would rather you just give me the keys.â He said, âMr. Chappelle, your friend already told us heâs your designated driver. We canât let you drive in this condition.â I was like, âNo, nigga, Iâm good.â And then suddenly, the shit turned into Vegas. He was like⊠âIâll let you blow for it.â I said, âExcuse me?â He said, âIf you blow in my breathalyzerââ I said, âOh, nigga, I thought you was trying to get your dick sucked. Whatâs theâ Whew! Whew!â âIf you blow in my breathalyzer and pass, Iâll give you the keys to the car.â I said, âUh⊠set âem up, nigga. Letâs play.â And I blew in that thing. And it made a noise. âBeep!â I said, âUh-oh.â And he looked at it. He said, âOh, well, Mr. Chappelle, I guess youâre free to go.â I said, âI am?â I didnât know that thing didnât pick up weed. I drove home on the miles an hour. Yeah, it all worked out. It all worked out. Iâm one of the lucky ones.4It doesnât work out that well for everybody. I saw that videotape of that lady that got beat up in LA in traffic. You see that shit on rush hour traffic? They beat a black womanâs ass. This woman didnât even do anything wrong. Itâs fucked up. It was so fucked up, it didnât even go to court. The City of L.A. just gave that woman $1.5 million for her pain and suffering. That is not bad, considering thatâs the same amount of money that Marcos Maidana made to fight Floyd Mayweather the second time. And this woman obviously hasnât trained a day in her life. You can see it on the tape. She didnât come to fight. Her guards were low. She was taking a lot of shots.qXïżœ Everybodyâs mad at police now. I watched thatâ You see that shit on Netflix, Making a Murderer? The Steven Avery story. If you havenât seen it, check it out. Steven Avery is in more trouble than any white person in the history of the United States has ever been in! In a justice system designed for him to thrive, heâs failed miserably twice. I canât even wrap my mind around it. If Making a Murderer was about a black dude, that shit would be called Duh! Of course everything would go wrong. Seems like he did it, all right. The motherfucker even had $200,000 for his legal defense. That should get you off in Wisconsin. Thatâs like OJ money. All he needed to get off that he didnât have was a single black juror. Thatâs all it wouldâve took. Because only a black dude in the United States can look at other dudes and be like, âI think the police did this shit.â Heâs fucked up in the game. Thatâs how OJ got off.qXïżœ Iâve been watching that new OJ show. I canât get enough of that shit. Doesnât it bring back good memories? But I forgot just how polarizing that OJ case was. And you know, Iâve met OJ Simpson on four different occasions in my life. And before the end of the show, I will tell you about each of those occasions. The first time I met OJ Simpson, I was in Santa Monica. -Santa Monica! -Yeah! I canât believe a black dude was like, âSanta Monica!â You the last nigga I would expect to say that. Let me see your shoes. You got some Vans on, nigga? What you got? âSanta Monica!â You? At the time, I was . I had done a show, and the guy from the club came up and was like, âHey, OJ Simpsonâs here, and he said he wants to meet you.â I said, âWhat? Fuck yeah!â I ran down the steps, and OJ was down there. Heâs like, âHey, young man. How are you? Itâs very good to meet you. And youâre doing really good work, and I hope good things happen for you in your life.â I was like, âMan, thanks, Mr. Juice.â Standing beside him, wasâ I donât know the nice way to say thisâ his soon-to-be-slain wife. Ladies and gentlemen, man the fuck up, or youâre not gonna make it to the end of this show. Just man the fuck up. Sheâs dead. We already know what happened. We donât know who did it, but we know what happened. I should tell you, that woman was very nice to me. She actually embraced me. She said, âI think youâre adorable,â and she hugged me. She goes, âGood luck to you,â and she held me for a long time. And I whispered in her ear, âBitch, are you trying to get us both killed?â Iâm just kidding. I didnât say that, but⊠that was the first time, in a nutshell.qX{ Itâs good to see so many⊠so many different people here from so many different ethnicities. Very diverse crowd. Looks like you thought Bernie Sanders was gonna come out in this motherfucker. But⊠surprise! Itâs me. Yeah. Yeah, you know, Iâm happy, really, to see black people come. A lot of black people donât fuck with me like they used to. But thereâs a few reasons you donât see black people at my shows. One is because, obviously, black people have slower Internet connections. I mean, that would be my guess. I donât know whatâ Actually, my own actions drew a wedge between me and the community I hold so dear.qX A couple of weeks ago, I was supposed to be in Flint, Michigan, for a charity benefit that was supposed to raise awareness for the appalling condition of the water in Flint. I donât know if you know this, but the water in Flint is fucking poisonous. Itâs actually making people sick. Hollywood people are like, âSo what? At least they have water.â But this waterâ this water is fucked up. So, a lot of black celebrities flew into Flint, and they did a tremendous charity benefit, and I was on the schedule to appear.5Uh⊠So, the reason a lot of people havenât heard about this benefitâ it was the same day as the Oscars. Right, I know. So, I was on my way to the airport to go to Flint, and then Chris Rock calls me and is like, âHey, Dave, I got a ticket for you for the Oscars. Can you make it?â And I was like, âSure, nigga. Iâm on my way to the airport right now.â Come on, man. What am I gonna do about that water? What am I, a fucking superhero? I need to have fun. I need to live, too! I didnât fuck that water up! Stevie Wonder was there. They didnât need me. Iâm sorry, everybody. Iâd never been to the Oscars. Youâve seen the movies I make. I was excited.6I knew I was gonna get into some trouble, because when I was walking on the red carpet, the black press came after me. âExcuse me, brother.â When you hear somebody call you âbrotherâ too much, something terrible is about to happen. âExcuse me, brother. Brother?â And I looked back, and the motherfucker had a tuxedo with the kente cloth tie. I said, âUh-oh.â He said, âI just want to ask you a couple questions.â I said, âWhat publication are you with?â He said, âMe? Iâm with The Daily Bongo.â I said, âDaily Bongo? What the fuck? Who the fuck reads this?â He said, âListen, brother, I just want to ask you a quick question. You understand that this year, this is a boycott for the Oscars. So, Iâm just wondering what made you, of all people, cross the motherfucking picket line and be here tonight.â I said, âBoycott? Nigga, I havenât been working in ten years. What do you mean, boycott? Iâve been on strike. Yâall niggas didnât stop working. I had to watch fucking Key and Peele do my show every night! So, fuck The Daily Bongo,â is what I said. I went to the Oscars and had a wonderful time. I went in that fucking green room. It was filled with so many stars, I couldnât even believe what I was seeing. Hollywood was seducing me all over again. I was sitting back there. Iâm smoking, drinking with the stars.7And then two Hollywood movie producers came over, right to me. âOh, my God. Dave Chappelle,â said the leader one. He was obviously gay. Some guys, you can just tell. The other one seemed like a money guy. Maybe he was from Texas or some shit. But the gay one was definitely the leader because he did all the talking. And then he hit me with: âSo, David, um⊠do you have any movie ideas that you would like to pursue?â The truth is, I donât. But if you know the game, youâre not supposed to tell motherfuckers you donât have ideas. I was like, âYeah, man. I got plenty of ideas.â And he called my bluff. âReally? Like what?â âHuh? Oh. Um⊠umâŠâ8And then I just started making up shit that I thought maybe heâd like to see. I said, âI have a superhero idea.â He goes, âReally?â I go, âYeah. Heâs aâ Heâs a gay superhero.â He was like, âReally?! Whatâs it called?â âHuh? Oh, itâs calledâ Itâs called Same Hero, New Boots. Itâs about a gay sous-chef in San Francisco⊠that gets bit by a radioactive rat on his shift when heâs taking out the trash and is blessed with powers beyond his wildest dreams, supersonic gay kind of powers. And he starts saving everybody in San Francisco. But at first, he only saves gay people. Later, he saves everybody, and the whole city just falls in love with him. The only problem is, no one remembers him when he saves them.â âWell, I donât understand. Why wouldnât they remember him?â I said, âBecause, dummy, heâs gay. He keeps changing his outfit. People come upâ âThanks for saving me, sir. Whatâs your name anyway?â Heâs like, âSame Hero, New Boots!â And that motherfucker flies away.â9He was like, âI like it a lot.â The Texan didnât like that shit at all. He was upset. âThatâs impossible, a gay superhero.â I said, âWhat? Well, I have others. I have a superhero youâd love, âcause heâs stronger than Superman and he fights for truth, justice and the American way, like Superman, but more than Superman. He beats up Mexicans for no reason.â The Texanâs like, âYou got my attention.â Iâm like, âMan, this motherfuckerâs so strong, he can fly and do all this great shit. Only problem with this guy is he canât even activate his powers unless he touchesâ unless he touches a womanâs vagina. Not a long touch, just a couple of pats.â He said, âWell, whatâs the problem with that?â I said, âThe problem, sir, is that our hero is not a handsome man. And heâs often short on cash. So, whenever trouble breaks out, he has to run around the city and convince women to let him pat their vaginas. âPlease, miss! That buildingâs on fire. Can I pat your vagina? Quickly. People are dying!â But he canât tell them exactly why. âEww! Get away! Youâre gross!â âPlease, miss! People are dying! Just a couple of pats!â âEww! Gross! Get away!â So, he rapes them.10I know, I know. Thatâs the dilemma for the audience. Because he rapes, but he saves a lot of lives. And he saves way more than he rapes, and he only rapes to save. But he does rape.â I didnât realize it, but the whole green room was looking at us. All the celebrities were disgusted. âOhh.â That guy from Texas was like, âHereâs my card. Call me on Monday.â That worked out.qXïżœ The second time I met OJ Simpson. It was right after the trial of the century. There I was, now a young man of probably 23. OJ Simpson was the most famous, or infamous, face on planet Earth. I was in a restaurant in Beverly Hills with my agents. I wasnât alone in the restaurant, but I was alone. I was the only black person in the restaurant. And in the 90âs, that felt very uncomfortable. Now I tend to enjoy it at this age. I was having dinner with my agents, celebrating a deal that they told me was lucrative, but I later learned fucking sucked. And suddenly, a group of women walked by. Every race was in that group. Black, white, Asian, Latina, white, white⊠and white again. They were all gorgeous. I watched them walk by. Then I saw a familiar face. Al Cowlings, the man from the infamous Bronco chase, walked by and embraced one of the women, and they walked towards the door. Couldnât believe what I saw. And then, close behind him, was OJ Simpson, newly released from jail. The restaurant fell still. I was shocked. I didnât mean to say it out loud, but it just came out. âOJ!â He stopped, turned around to see who said it, saw my black face and correctly assumed it was me. I was sitting in the corner of the booth. He leaned over all the white people I was having dinner with and shook my hand. âHow are you, young man?â He looked in my eyes, and I could see in his eyes that he didnât remember meeting me the first time. And then he walked away. And I looked back at my agents, and all of them had nothing short of disgust on their faces. And the only one with the courage to voice their disgust was a woman named Sharon who used to represent me. âHow could you?â she said. âHow could you shake hands with that murderer?â I said, âSharon, with all due respect, that murderer ran for over 11,000 yards. And he was acquitted. So, you know, fuck it. The glove didnât fit. The glove didnât fit. Get over yourself.â Some people canât do that.qXïżœ1112