Dave Chappelle is attacked on stage in LA after woke activists tried to cancel him for jokes about trans people

  • The comedian, 48, was performing at Netflix’s first ever live comedy show
  • A fan stormed the stage and tackled him as Jamie Foxx and security intervened 
  • Chappelle was uninjured and continued with his set as the attacker was detained
  • Chris Rock then performed a set and joked that the attacker was Will Smith 

Dave Chappelle has been attacked on stage while performing a Netflix comedy show in Los Angeles. 

Video from last night’s Netflix Is A Joke event shows someone charging on to the stage and tackling the comedian before he is dragged off by security. 

Jamie Foxx, who was watching the show from the wings of the Hollywood Bowl wearing a sheriff’s hat, rushed on stage along with security to detain the attacker.

Chappelle, who sparked outrage in the trans community with comments in a Netflix show last year, appeared to be uninjured and continued with his set, joking: ‘It was a trans man’. 

Chris Rock, who performed later in the Netflix is a Joke event, then came on stage and joked: ‘Was that Will Smith?’

Footage later appears to show the attacker being treated by paramedics for an injured arm. 

Dave Chappelle was last night attacked on stage while filming a Netflix special in Los Angeles

Video from the Netflix Is A Joke event shows a man charging on to the stage and tackling the comedian

After the attacker was detained, Chappelle thanked Foxx on stage.

He said: ‘Shout out to Jamie Foxx by the way. Whenever you’re in trouble, Jamie Foxx will show up in a sheriff’s hat.’ 

Chappelle came under fire last year over jokes about trans people in his Netflix comedy show The Closer.

During the controversial special, he made one comment stating that ‘gender is a fact’, prompting Netflix staff to protest and mass outrage on social media against some of his jokes.

The attack comes weeks after Will Smith attacked Chris Rock on stage at the Oscars, raising fears it would inspire similar violent protests against performers. 

The event was the first ever live Netflix comedy festival and features performances from big name stars including Seth Rogen, Snoop Dogg, Bill Burr and Pete Davidson.

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