The comedian spoke about the Los Angeles wildfires and Carter's visit to Palestine before turning to the president-elect in his "SNL" opening monologue.
Chappelle, whose last appearance ignited an antisemitism controversy, was addressing President-elect Donald Trump.
Comedian Dave Chappelle returned to “Saturday Night Live” to host for the fourth time just two days before President-elect Donald Trump retakes the oath of office, and he had a powerful message for the country’s 47th president.
Dave Chappelle shared a powerful message during his opening monologue on the latest episode of “Saturday Night Live.”
Comedian Dave Chappelle during a monologue on Saturday Night Live delivered a message about Donald Trump and remarked on Jimmy Carter.
Trump is gone," Chappelle said at the time, before joking about Trump's response to the coronavirus, saying when he heard the president call it the "Kung-flu," he said to him
Dave Chappelle avoided the antisemitic jokes of his 2022 monologue, and instead talked about Israel and the Palestinians.
Comedian Dave Chappelle gave a powerful SNL monologue that tackled the Los Angeles wildfires, Jimmy Carter's legacy, Gaza and Trump.
Over the course of a 15-minute opening monologue, comedian Dave Chappelle tackled everything from the Los Angeles wildfires to Donald Trump’s forthcoming inauguration, from Sean Combs indictment to a heartfelt tribute for the late Jimmy Carter.
Another Dave Chappelle appearance on Saturday Night Live, his fourth, finds the comedian using his monologue to offer advice to Donald Trump.
In the longest monologue in “Saturday Night Live” history, Dave Chappelle delivered a pointed message to incoming President Donald Trump ahead of his inauguration Monday, calling for empathy and compassion as Americans prepared for a new chapter.
Dave Chappelle found the sleeves to his suit and did the longest monologue in Saturday Night Live history. At a whopping 17-minutes long, Chappelle touched on such topics as Palestine and his hopes for the new Trump presidency.