David Cross Calls Out Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle for Performing at Saudi Comedy Festival

When comedians sign up for “two weeks of laughter in the desert”,  you might expect jokes — not expletive-laden rebukes from their own. But David Cross isn’t holding back in response to Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle, Louis C.K., and others agreeing to perform at Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh Comedy Festival. His critique cuts deep and is as sharp as any punchline.

“Gross Thing” of a Festival

David Cross
Riyadh Comedy Festival, Courtesy Riyadh Comedy Festival/David Cross

In a blog post on his official site, Cross openly declared he was “disgusted, and deeply disappointed in this whole gross thing. That people I admire, with unarguable talent, would condone this totalitarian fiefdom for…what, a fourth house? A boat? More sneakers?” He prefaced it by noting he was “not offered the gig,” but added pointedly: “there’s not enough money for me to help these depraved, awful people put a ‘fun face’ on their crimes against humanity.”

He didn’t mince words about the regime. “You’re performing for literally, the most oppressive regime on earth. They have SLAVES for f**** sake!!!” he wrote. David Cross lambasted the irony of comedians who rail against “cancel culture” at home yet allegedly sign contracts that forbid criticism of the Saudi government abroad.

Heroes or Hypocrites?

David Cross reserved a particular venom for Chappelle, Burr, and Louis C.K., saying, “These are some of my HEROES!… but my god, Dave and Louie and Bill, and Jim? Clearly you guys don’t give a s*** about what the rest of us think….All of your bitching about ‘cancel culture’ and ‘freedom of speech’ and all that s***? Done. You don’t get to talk about it ever again.” Cross framed the decision to play the festival as a moral collapse, one that undermines comedians’ credibility when they later decry censorship or suppression.

Punchlines Meet Red Lines

Cross even drew a reluctant parallel to his own past, referencing the backlash he once endured for appearing in Alvin and the Chipmunks: “Holy s***, I remember the backlash I got for appearing in Alvin and the Chipmunks! You would’ve thought that I had taken money from a bunch of people responsible for funding Al Qaeda!”

That anecdote underscored his view: that some criticism is inevitable in entertainment, but willingly entering into a festival backed by a regime accused of severe human rights violations crosses a red line.

What Comes After the Roast

David Cross closes his blog post by urging fans to support meaningful causes instead. He points to the Human Rights Foundation as a worthwhile recipient of attention and donations.

In the eyes of Cross, this isn’t about comedy clubs or ticket sales — it’s about whether comedians will continue to claim a moral authority over speech, censorship, and power dynamics when they accept money from governments with poor human rights records. His public spat with Burr and Chappelle signals that, for some in the comedy world, there are punchlines you just can’t deliver — because the joke’s on the performer.

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