Even though he has built a successful career in comedy over the past decade with set after set mocking the transgender community, Dave Chappelle told NPR he doesnāt see it that way. And he used the interview to call out Republicans, claiming theyāre the ones who hurt trans people, by twisting his jokes.
āI donāt feel like anything I do is malicious or even harmful,ā Chappelle told NPRās Michel Martin during a Newsmakers video podcast recorded in his hometown of Yellow Springs, Ohio, which was posted Wednesday.
Among other topics, Martin asked him about āthe weaponization of jokes.ā
āI did resent that the Republican Party ran on transgender jokes,ā Chappelle said. āI felt like they were doing a weaponized version of what I was doing. Thatās not what I was doing.ā
Itās hardly the first time the popular comic has had to answer for his anti-trans routines, going back as far as 2017. Wanda Sykes called him out in 2023. Earlier this year, trans comedians offered unsolicited advice on how to tell trans jokes on Saturday Night Live without offending anyone. That followed Chappelleās controversial set in Saudi Arabia last December, where he doubled down on using trans people as a punchline, as Out reported.
Chappelle offered NPR listeners an example of how the GOP āweaponizedā his comedy.
āBefore I learned the phrase, āI respectfully decline,ā I was on Capitol Hill, and everybody ran up to take pictures with me from every congressional office. And I just take pictures with whoever asked. I didnāt ask how they vote or what their voting record is,ā Chappelle said.
āHere comes Lauren Boebert, and she said, āCan I get a picture?ā And I had already taken 40 pictures. I didnāt want to say no in front of everybody, but I didnāt know the phrase āI respectfully decline.ā So I just took the picture,ā he said. āAnd then she posted the picture before I could even get from there to the show and says something to the effect of, āJust two people that know that itās just two genders.ā Just instantly, like, weaponized or politicized. So I got to the arena, and I lit her ass up for doing that. And she should never do that to a person like me.ā
Chappelle must have missed the backlash his jokes about trans people have generated across his eight Netflix standup specials since 2016, including Sticks & Stones (2019), The Closer (2021), The Dreamer (2023), and Unstoppable (2025). It was reported in 2016 that Netflix was paying him $20 million for each one.
āI think if I did hurt somebody with my work, boy, they would have been laid that at my feet. Iām just not doing that.ā
Trans comedian, speaker, and civil rights pioneer Vandy Beth Glenn of Decatur, Georgia, sees it differently.
"The law of unintended consequences has brought down better men than Chappelle," Glenn told Out.
Melody Maia Monet, the award-winning Trans Resource Manager at the LGBTQ+ Center in Orlando and popular YouTube personality, responded to a Threads post by her friend, out gay actor and longstanding trans ally, Wilson Cruz:
āWe told him that would happen,ā Monet commented. āThat his jokes as someone seen to be on the left, was creating the environment for the right to capitalize on it. He isnāt ājust a comedianā as they all like to say. They are tastemakers. Entertainment cannot make change in and of itself, but it can point to where change needs to be made or where things can be exploited. Congrats Dave for showing that the ātrans issueā could be weaponized. You didnāt pass the laws, but you pointed the way.ā
āIām not even mad [people] take issue with my work. Good, fine. Who cares?ā Chapelle has said to his critics, as Variety reported. āWhat I take issue with is the idea that because they donāt like it, Iām not allowed to say it. Art is a nuanced endeavor. I have a belief that they are trying to take the nuance out of speech in American culture, that theyāre making people speak as if theyāre either on the right or the left. Everything seems absolute, and any opinion I respect is way more nuanced than these binary choices they keep putting in front of us. I donāt see the world in red or blue.ā
Asked to weigh in on the behavior of President Donald Trump, whose obsession with trans Americans was evident as recently as Monday, when he brought up āmen in womenās sportsā at a White House publicity stunt about his tax policy, Chappelle had this to say:
āMaybe if he wasnāt president, Iād think that was funny. Or maybe at times⦠I do think, you know, that thatās wearing thin,ā Chappelle told NPR. āThere are funny things about him. Like, if I were to talk about him, it would be funny. But I think what he does is so consequential and so much of these things, you know, in my lifetime, Iāve never really seen anything of a phenomenon quite like [him]. Iām not trying to be political, but itās remarkable. I donāt know. I donāt know how funny it is.ā






