Triumph the Insult Comic Dog Perfectly Burns Dave Chappelle Ahead of ‘SNL’ Hosting Gig

Robert Smigel advised Chappelle to stick to his usual territory this weekend
Triumph the Insult Comic Dog Perfectly Burns Dave Chappelle Ahead of ‘SNL’ Hosting Gig

Triumph the Insult Comic Dog went off the leash to call out Dave Chappelle ahead of his hosting performance on Saturday Night Live this weekend when the stand-up will surely turn in another memorable, topical and terrific opening monologue — for Triumph to poop on.

The last time Chappelle hosted Saturday Night Live was on November 12, 2022 when the controversial stand-up giant used his opening monologue to defend Kanye West from accusations of anti-Semitism after West had recently tweeted that he was “going death con 3 on Jewish people.” Shortly thereafter, West donned a gimp suit and went on Alex Jones’ show to make such definitely-not-anti-Semitic comments as “I like Hitler,” “I love Nazis” and “I see good things about Hitler." Now, roughly two years later, Chappelle is ready to return to Studio 8H this Saturday when he will probably give a tearful eulogy for Jean-Marie Le Pen.

The official Twitter account of Robert Smigel’s roastmaster puppet character from Late Night with Conan O’Brien is celebrating Chappelle Week at 30 Rockefeller Plaza by warning the SNL darling not to go barking up the wrong tree during this trying time: 

This past November, SNL broke from its usual tradition of having Chappelle appear on the show following the general election and deliver his simultaneously sobering and playful perspective on American culture and politics to a tense audience, instead giving Bill Burr the unenviable post-Trump-victory hosting position. Perhaps this was because, after 2022, SNL decided that they like Chappelle more when hes downplaying anti-Semitism among the rich and powerful, and they wanted to wait until the hate speech on Twitter grew deafening to have Chappelle come out and defend his good friend and fellow SNL host Elon Musk.

In his most recent SNL monologue, Chappelle opened the show by glibly toeing an anti-Semitic line during a time when entertainers and athletes were openly professing their love for Nazi ideology. “Early in my career, I learned there are two words you should never say together,” Chappelle noted, referencing then-recent inflammatory comments from West, Kyrie Irving and numerous other celebrities regarding Jewish people. “Those words are the and Jews. Never heard someone do good after they said that.”

Chappelle went on to defend Wests erratic and bigoted behavior, saying of the rappers public claims that Jewish people control all media and entertainment in America, “Ive been to Hollywood — its a lot of Jews. Like, a lot.” Chappelle hinted at his misgivings with what he believes to be the preferential treatment of Jewish people in the media and popular culture throughout the set, at one point commenting, “If theyre Black, then its a gang. If theyre Italian, its a mob. But if theyre Jewish, its a coincidence and you should never speak about it.”

Chappelle even pushed back on the controversy surrounding NBA star Irvings platforming and promotion of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial, saying, “I know that Jewish people have been through terrible things all over the world but you cant blame that on Black Americans. … Kyrie Irvings Black ass was nowhere near the Holocaust. In fact, hes not even certain it existed.”

Now, with Los Angeles on fire and tensions high throughout the entertainment business, Triumph says that Chappelle should stick to his old punching bag, because if history has taught us anything, its that anti-Semitism is rarely as dangerous as playing with fire.

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