Racism: Black Who Called Obama “My Nigga” has His Show Canceled Because No One Watches It

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 16, 2016

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Who’s smug now, Larry? Who’s smug now? I’ll tell you who’s smug now, Larry – White people.

I was only aware of Larry Wilmore because of that clip of him calling Obama “my nigga” at a state dinner, which I thought epitomized the death-stroke the Nigga President has attempted to deliver to this country.

Anyway, he had a show on Comedy Central that just got canceled because no one watched it.

Kevin Fallon over at the Daily Beast has had his jimmies undergo a maximized rustling over the news no one wants to look at Black people who are not Dave Chapelle on TV.

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Kevin Fallon lol why would you post this picture of yourself?

I’m going to quote more from this article than I would normally quote from a Daily Beast article, because it’s just so darned funny.

Daily Beast:

Comedy Central announced Monday that, with just 12 weeks to go before the presidential election, the network is canceling The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore, with the final episode of the show airing Thursday. The show had launched last January, serving as a replacement for The Colbert Report.

“I’m really grateful to Comedy Central, Jon Stewart, and our fans to have had this opportunity,” Wilmore said in a statement. “But I’m also saddened and surprised we won’t be covering this crazy election or ‘The Unblackening’ as we’ve coined it. And keeping it 100, I guess I hadn’t counted on ‘The Unblackening’ happening to my time slot as well.”

When Larry Wilmore was tapped by Stewart to be Stephen Colbert’s successor in the post-Daily Show time slot, it was a long overdue, sadly still-radical move. Wilmore, who had served as “senior black correspondent” on The Daily Show, became the only person of color among the oft-derided White Guys in Suits who ruled late-night.

More, his show never shied away from his blackness, capitalizing on his wry racial observations as the show’s greatest comedy selling point and doubling down on what’s become a crucial pop-culture realization—that, regardless of race, the perspective will have universal appeal and resonance.

Except that it obviously didn’t, which is why the show was canceled.

His signature segment, “Keeping it 100,” had Wilmore and his guests speaking the unfiltered truth about controversial topics, regardless of the consequences.

At a time in late-night when every celebrity interview and viral clip is carefully orchestrated, it was exhilarating. As exhilarating as Wilmore’s go-for-broke opinions on Bill Cosby, Black Lives Matter, and the election, which, as mentioned before, he coined “The Unblackening”—what he thought was a reactionary search for Obama’s (white) successor.

ROFL.

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After Obama’s Presidency, people reacted by wanting a White President.

Why?

That exhilaration, however, was apparently only felt by critics.

Asked by The New York Times’ John Kolbin for the reason behind the cancellation, Comedy Central president Kent Alterman said, “Even though we’ve given it a year and a half, we’ve been hoping against hope that it would start to click with our audience, but it hasn’t happened and we’ve seen no evidence of it happening.”

Simply, Wilmore’s perspective—the one I found remarkable in the paragraphs above—“hasn’t resonated,” according to Alterman.

He’s certainly right. While The Colbert Report averaged 1.7 million viewers in its last year, The Nightly Show averaged less than half that, only about 776,000 a night in the past few months.

But while this supports Alterman’s assessment that the show hasn’t clicked with audiences, it’s his prediction that “we’ve seen no evidence of it happening” in the future that’s more worrisome.

Just as Comedy Central made a huge leap for diversity in late-night by giving Wilmore his own show in the first place, the network is shoving the progress two steps back by canceling it.

What do you call it when a Jew has to choose between money and forcing corrosive cultural revolution on the goyim?

A yidistential crisis.

When a move toward progress is made in the entertainment industry, the parties involved often sweat to death under the harsh spotlight that’s put on them. When a gamble is made and it doesn’t work out, executives don’t just start betting more conservatively. They shut down the whole casino.

You see, for example, the reports that studios are reconsidering other all-female reboots after the recent Ghostbusters failed to light up the box office. (Although the recently staffed up Ocean’s Eleven all-female reboot counters that theory.)

Yes.

Because people hated it.

The Jewish drive to destroy the goyim while stacking up infinity shekels worked when they were selling porno and cocaine. Trying to make money on Black talk show hosts and feminist Ghostbusters movies creates a quandary.

In the late-night space, there’s no greater example than Joan Rivers. She became the first woman to host a late-night talk show, and the only one to do a night show on a broadcast network—Wanda Sykes had a short-lived weekly program on Fox in 2009.

Can you be a trailblazer if no one follows your trail?

I don’t know?

Is this like, a riddle?

Like “the sound of one hand clapping”?

one-armed man zen koan

Maybe Wilmore should blaze himself a trail back to Africa and the female Ghostbusters should blaze themselves a trail back to the kitchen?

It’s worth noting that in the midst of that same late-night TV shakeup, Comedy Central hired not one, but two black talk hosts, with Wilmore and Noah replacing Colbert and Stewart.

The network has reiterated its support of Noah, whose ratings have also been disappointing and whose critical notices don’t compare to that of Stewart’s—or even Wilmore’s, for that matter. For the first time in 16 years, The Daily Show wasn’t nominated for an Emmy for Best Variety Series.

Comedy Central is to be commended for taking a risk, but Wilmore’s swift cancellation reflects late-night TV’s long history of quickly aborted endeavors with hosts that deviate from the norm. There’s the exception of Arsenio Hall, whose first late-night show ran from 1989-1993. But even Hall’s attempt to return to the genre ended after just one season in 2013.

As Sonia Saraiya pointed out on Salon when Wilmore was first given The Nightly Show: Hall, Chris Rock, Sykes, and W. Kamau Bell all were given opportunities to end the White Guy in Suit domination of late-night. And all of their shows failed to last more than a season.

At least The Nightly Show was given a season and a half.

Sure, Noah was hired after Wilmore, but looking at the history of black hosts in late-night you’ll see that they are rarely given the opportunity to “click” with an audience that white counterparts are often given—heck, or even to just exist on air for seasons without any audience to speak of, just because a network supported them and their voice.

LOL

This is why you work for the Daily Beast and not a television station.

But maybe the government could force the goyim to watch these shows?

hillary seizure

tfw you sign an executive order forcing White people to watch Black talk shows