See this part right here? You're biased against the entertainment industry so your thoughts are already from an adverse place so anything you say would need to be taken with a grain of salt.
To prove it I'll give you a personal example: I'm a Buckeye. I hate Michigan. You can't trust any take I have on Michigan because it is DRENCHED IN BUCKEYE BIAS.
Then pass that salt.
You didn't answer the question, you mentioned that you have family and friends that worked in the industry so tell in what capacity did they work and how that informed your opinion. You brought it up so they must have been close to Dave for you to mention it.
Secondly, you cannot Black ball someone who has grassroots support. That's why Dave was able to survive through it all because the people never stopped supporting him. Chappelle proved that he was bigger than the media companies who black balled him.
They are doing again btw...no one is airing his new documentary, no one wants to touch after this faux controversy.
Lastly, what does his money have to do with this? You mentioned it in your last sentence. None of this is an attack on you we are just having a dialogue.
It's not about being closed to Dave, it's being in those circles and it's the same story time and time again.
Let me digress by saying, in any professional circle of folk doing good or trying to do better for ones self, you're bound to run into folk who are a tad bigheaded, and that's definitely the case for folks in the entertainment/TV/comedy world.
And no, they aren't blackballing Dave. His name is still in the headlines and for the most part, people are taking his side
This isn't being blackballed
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos has addressed staff members on the streamer's controversial new Dave Chappelle stand-up special, "The Closer."
variety.com
He has the suits (white folk) backing him up. He's going to be fine when the smoke clears.
Why do I bring up money?
The brother Chapelle is worth around 50 million. On top of financial security, he will, when this is all said and done have the artistic and social security of his peers and his fans to guarantee
Rich folk don't have to face the same problems that black folk like us have to deal with. His issues aren't are fights.
I own a landscaping business and one residential property that I rent out. And I'm comfortable. However. If word got out on social media I was talking sideways about Mexicans, gays and trifling folks on unemployment, even if it was out of context or a joke, ain't nobody coming to my rescue. I say something out of pocket and word gets to one of my tenants and that's my bottom line. My reputation on front street, and Chapelle and the Calvary ain't sticking the necks out for me.
A brother working the register ain't gonna have the means to defend himself if he speaks what's on his mind about subpar working conditions and types of mess that happens to him.
What do we get out of defending these rich black folk? I don't need any of them to speak for me. So why put in the energy for them, when we should be using it for one another?