That was the first real, legit, actual Rotten Tomatoes link you posted. Salon =/= Rotten Tomatoes.
Both were sourced from the site I said. You just got confused. Move on.
I know what the site is. You don't seem to know how to present proper evidence until multiple requests are made demanding direct evidence that doesn't come from third-party sources.
Wrong. You didn't know what the site was at all. I linked examples. I said to look at the site for more reviews whining about exactly what I said. Take your L and move on.
Posting two articles from there that agree with you while the reviews vary is a poor debate move.
I told you how to read more. You are lazy. Not my problem
And what's the first thing I see from Rotten Tomatoes itself?
After skipping what 6 paragraphs? Yawn
Nothing of substance as you ignore the very parts that proved me right.
"Sticks & Stones leaves the audience with the sense that there was more work to be done before the special was filmed."
Parts you didn't quote and ignoring the audience reviews which refute the review.
Who Is Dave Chappelle's Netflix Special 'Sticks & Stones' For?
.
"The short answer is no, because
Sticks & Stones, while still structured like a comedy special, complete with setups and punchlines and clever pivots and callbacks, isn’t especially funny. Much of this stems from the topics that Chappelle covers, particularly in the first half of the special, as he talks about (among other things) cancel culture, Michael Jackson,
R. Kelly, Louis C.K., and Chappelle’s own problematic jokes about the LGBTQ community. This is nothing new for Chappelle, of course, but tackling such emotionally charged, sensitive topics means that only the best jokes will actually generate laughter. Turns out, the jokes Chappelle brings are… well, fine. But they rarely reach a level of insight or surprise or humor that exceeds the shock of the topic, which means we’re mostly just left with, well, a bunch of uncomfortable topics that didn’t make us laugh."
Netflixable? Chapelle courts controversy in “Sticks & Stones” standup special
"When Chapelle gets into the funniest portion of the act, the last third, he comments on the Jussie Smollett fake hate crime, exaggerating and ridiculing the actor’s name in a fey-French fashion. That sounds a tad homophobic there, Dave, but no matter."
"Kyle Smith, who used to write for The New York Post, is being disingenuous or at the very least, is using Rev. Al — who is black — to beat up another black person — a favorite conservative tactic"
"When Chapelle describes his friend Kevin Hart as “damn near perfect,” you realize he’s too close to the subject to have an impartial take on the “cancellation culture” that “the alphabets” — the LGBTQ “social justice warrior” twitter outrage machine — used to take Hart’s “dream, hosting the Oscars,” away from him."
Like I said you are lazy. You didn't even read the reviews. You just quote one line as if it represents everything in the review. Try again. More effort next time.
"He's one of the few comedians who can really touch on a lot of different sensitive topics and still make it funny"
A positive review.... I wasn't talking about positive review.
"Sticks & Stones" isn't necessarily a failure, it just feels like Chappelle presenting half-formed material with few jokes that truly hit hard and stand out."
Dave Chappelle Wins and Loses With Netflix Comedy Special ‘Sticks & Stones’
"Chappelle has been criticized before for his jokes about the LGBTQ community and in “Sticks & Stones” it is indeed where he falls the flattest. He uses a joke about Kevin Hart’s tweetgate and the Oscars to segue into a long commentary about how in the industry you can’t criticize “the alphabet people,” but you can use the N-word. There might have been a more challenging, valid point to be made in this section, but instead of going deeper Chappelle twists it into a joke about not understanding trans people. He compares being trans to being a black man who feels Chinese, complete with making a face and voice. Chappelle’s cover is that his wife is Asian, but the real issue is that it’s simply not very funny. His takedown of the term LGBTQ itself plays that old joke of, “I’m not racist because I have (place your preferred ethnicity here) friends.” The funniest moment in this section is when an audience member’s cell phone goes off and Chappelle says, “what is this, high school? They’ve probably got a babysitter, go answer the phone.”
The joke was correct. No ftm knows what male itch feels like.
"“Sticks & Stones” isn’t necessarily a failure, it just feels like Chappelle presenting half-formed material with few jokes that truly hit hard and stand out. He can still grab a crowd’s attention, but it’s a harder job to provoke than to
merely offend."
Oh no alphabet people are upset at jokes.
Try harder next time