![]() ![]() Can I say that again for the audience? They’re so bad that they’re not available on Netflix or Tubi.” (Cedric the Entertainer responded to Williams’s comments on Instagram on January 3, saying, “Revisionist History, regardless of whatever Katts opinion My career can’t be reduced to One Joke Katt Williams claims as his.”) They’re so bad, Shannon, they’re not available on Netflix or Tubi. That’s why he’s called ‘the Entertainer.’ We found out he can’t sing, can’t dance, and doesn’t write jokes. Sitting over here: ‘Why I’m not a movie star?’ He never wrote anything! Remember, when Cedric the Entertainer starts, he’s supposed to be singing, dancing, and telling jokes. He over here looking like a walrus … He can’t even get his arms off his stomach. On Cedric the Entertainer: “Cedric sitting here telling you why he ain’t a movie star. “Gotta get that anger up outcha champ,” he wrote. Every one I seen got a keeper.” (On January 4, Hart responded to Williams on Twitter in a post promoting his upcoming Netflix movie Lift. Didn’t Kevin let Tiffany in? … What do you mean ain’t no gatekeepers? There’s a hundred gates out here. They tell you there’s no gatekeepers, but we keep seeing the same person open the gate. It doesn’t need that to be funny, right?’ And me saying that and them going, ‘Oh yeah, no problem,’ and then going to give it to this other guy and having him doing it just like it was and acting like I’m a bad person ’cause I keep standing on my standard. All I had said was ‘Can we take some of this Stepin Fetchit shit out and then I can do it? It don’t need to be overtly homosexual ’cause I’m not homosexual. So how, simultaneously, was he here in Los Angeles doing the same thing? It didn’t happen.įor a five-year period, every single movie that Kevin Hart did was a movie that had been on my desk. He just did his documentary with Chris Rock, where he shows you that his whole upbringing in comedy was on the East Coast. What do you think a plant is? Maybe people don’t understand the definitions of these words. We’ve never heard of that before that person or since that person. Have we heard of a comedian that came to L.A., and in his first year in L.A., he had his own sitcom on network television and had his own film called Soul Plane that he was leading? No. He already had his deals when he got here. On Kevin Hart: “In 15 years in Hollywood, no one in Hollywood has a memory of a sold-out Kevin Hart show, there being a line for him, ever getting a standing ovation at any comedy club. To get the full effect, one must watch the podcast episode in full, but below is a brief selection of its various highlights, flagrant accusations, and possible libel. But this is very much a strap-in-and-enjoy-the-ride situation.īefore the interview even finished premiering on YouTube, it began going viral on Twitter, inspiring memes, jokes, and fact-checking provoking responses from some of Williams’s targets sparking discourse about how young Black comedians rarely get the exposure these older Black comedians continue to get and much more. He may not always be the most reliable narrator, and there are moments - like when he refers to Kim Kardashian as a “whore” or fixates too much on which male comedians have worn dresses in movies - that will raise eyebrows. Over the course of the interview, Williams makes outrageous claims (he said Harvey Weinstein offered to “suck my penis in front of all my people at my agency”) airs personal grievances with a half-dozen or so comedians, such as Cedric the Entertainer (who allegedly stole one of his jokes) and Michael Blackson (a comedian who doesn’t get “booed enough”) goes deep on the production of Friday After Next and dismisses rumors about his personal life. “And I have watched all of these lowbrow comedians come here and disrespect you in your face and tell you straight-up lies.” Was he there to “set the record straight”? Sharpe asked in reply. “The reason I had to come is because you’ve made a safe place for the truth to be told,” Williams said at the top of the interview. On January 3, the internet was stopped in its tracks by precisely this as Williams sat down for a nearly three-hour tour-de-force interview with ESPN First Take correspondent Shannon Sharpe on his podcast, Club Shay Shay. Remember The Last Dance? The must-watch documentary event of early 2020 in which Michael Jordan, reflecting on his final NBA championship campaign and legacy, captivated the world by finally cutting loose on his former teammates, rivals, and the headlines that dogged him throughout his career? Well, imagine if The Last Dance consisted solely of one long interview, switched focus from basketball to stand-up, and swapped out Jordan for comedy legend Katt Williams.
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