Jon Stewart Defends Dave Chappelle's 'Saturday Night Live' Monologue

Jon Stewart Defends Dave Chappelle's 'Saturday Night Live' Monologue

Add antisemitism to transphobia in the growing list of unpopular opinions comedian Dave Chappelle is being accused of. During his monologue on this week's Saturday Night Live, Chappelle made comments that were interpreted as antisemitic, adding to the controversy that the comedian had already stoked by making multiple anti-transgender comments recently. Fellow comedian Jon Stewart came to Chappelle's defense, telling Stephen Colbert that consequences aren't the way to stop people from being antisemitic. Read on for details.


Via Variety.

Jon Stewart defended his friend Dave Chappelle during his appearance on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” Tuesday evening, commenting on the comedian’s recent “Saturday Night Live” monologue, which Anti-Defamation League leadership criticized for “popularizing” antisemitic sentiments.

“Everybody calls me like, ‘You see Dave on “SNL”?’ And I say yes, we’re very good friends. I always watch and send nice texts,” Stewart began. “‘He normalized antisemitism with the monologue.’ I don’t know if you’ve been on comment sections on most news articles, but it’s pretty normal. It’s incredibly normal. But the one thing I will say is I don’t believe that censorship and penalties are the way to end antisemitism or to gain understanding. I don’t believe in that. It’s the wrong way for us to approach it.”

In his Nov. 12 hosting gig on “SNL,” Chappelle began the show with a lengthy 15-minute standup set, cracking jokes about Kanye West’s recent antisemitic remarks and his subsequent loss of numerous business partnerships.

Both comedians, Chappelle and Stewart have been friends for many years. The pair costarred in the 1998 comedy “Half Baked” and performed shows together through the COVID-19 pandemic. Stewart was also present during Chappelle’s Los Angeles show in May at which the comedian was attacked onstage.

“Dave said something in the ‘SNL’ monologue that I thought was constructive, which he says, ‘It shouldn’t be this hard to talk about things,'” Stewart said. “I’m called antisemitic because I’m against Israel’s treatment of Palestinians. I’m called other things from other people based on other opinions that I have, but those shut down debate… Whether it be comedy or discussion or anything else, if we don’t have the wherewithal to meet each other with what’s reality then how do we move forward? If we all just shut it down, then we retreat to our little corners of misinformation and it metastasizes. The whole point of all this is to not let it metastasize and to get it out in the air and talk about it.”

Stewart’s words also extended to the topic of Brooklyn Nets player Kyrie Irving, who is currently facing a team suspension after sharing a film featuring antisemitic content on his social media.

“This is a grown ass man. The idea that you would say to him, ‘We’re going to put you in a timeout. You have to sit in the corner and stare at the wall until you no longer believe that the Jews control the international banking system’… We will never gain any kind of understanding with each other,” Stewart said. “Penalizing somebody for having a thought — I don’t think is the way to change their minds or gain understanding.”

Get the rest of the story at Variety.