Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Wayne Brady Calls Out Racist Joke Made At His Expense On Old 'Whose Line Is It Anyway?' Episode

Wayne Brady Calls Out Racist Joke Made At His Expense On Old 'Whose Line Is It Anyway?' Episode
Photo by Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images

For many of us, this is a time of reflection upon our personal pasts, evaluating the ways in which we ourselves may have been racist or played into a racist power structure without a second thought.

But in the case of Wayne Brady, it became a reflection upon two moments in the popular show Whose Line Is It Anyway? when he was both part of a racist joke and also part of the reversal of the joke along with host Aisha Tyler.


Brady shared the moment on social media, which featured Ryan Stiles stepping out of line and implicating that Colin Mochrie, Brady, and guest star Jonathan Magnum were in a police lineup by saying:

"Can you pick out the man that robbed you?"

Brady immediately looks physically uncomfortable.

Seconds after the joke ends, he addresses the audience:

"Y'all know that's f***ed up, right?"

The clip also shows the end of the segment, where host Aisha Tyler joins Brady downstage and says:

"Sir, can you pick out the man that embezzled hundreds of millions of dollars in the American economy, and then made you pay for it?"

oscars applause GIF Giphy

Immediately, Brady responded with:

"You mean after systematically devaluing my education and relegating me to certain neighborhoods where I couldn't actually pursue the education that would enable me to rise to meet a certain fiscal stature in this country?"

Meanwhile, all three White men, looking very guilty in response to the crimes Brady and Tyler list, flee from the stage.

"And also preventing you from making any loans, or homes, or jobs, or businesses, or getting a car lease," Tyler adds, before the buzzer sounds.

Brady's caption reads:

"When you're joking but not really. When comedy and the truth meet up..."





Brady and Tyler's deconstruction of systemic racism in under a minute is so powerful and perfect that people all across the internet are expressing their admiration.





Tyler also commented on the clip on Twitter, but focused on the fact it was an accurate representation of how generations of innocent people of color ended up in prison based on rigged line ups:

"To be fair, how I took that joke is that police are biased, assume black people are inherently suspect, then leverage racist attitudes and manufacture evidence against them rather than do their jobs."
"I am quite clear, however, that it could play a totally different way."

As we continue to have discussions surrounding micro-aggressions, racist jokes and how to dismantle systemic racism step by step, people can remember this sliver of television which good-naturedly, yet all-too-honestly, broke down how Black people are oppressed by the system in America.

More from Trending

Donald Trump
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

White House's Post About Going Back To The Moon To 'Stay' Has Everyone Thinking The Same Thing

The White House was widely mocked online after sharing a post on X about their goal of bringing Americans back to the Moon and making sure they "stay," a declaration that prompted many to suggest the Trump administration should stay there while they're at it.

It all started when NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman wrote the following on X:

Keep Reading Show less
James Talarico
Tico Mendoza/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images

James Talarico Has Perfect Response To Hegseth's Pastor Who Prayed For His Death On MAGA Podcast

Texas Senate nominee James Talarico spoke out after MAGA podcaster Joshua Haymes and pastor Brooks Potteiger—who counts Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth among his congregants—prayed that "God kills" Talarico.

Earlier this month, Talarico pulled off an upset against Texas Democratic Representative Jasmine Crockett, who has urged Democrats to support his candidacy as the 2026 midterm season kicks off.

Keep Reading Show less
Anna Kendrick (left) and Kieran Culkin react during an uncomfortable 2010 press junket moment, as Michael Cera (right) remains at the center of the resurfaced interview.
@PATELICIOUSXO/X; Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

Video Of Anna Kendrick And Kieran Culkin's Uncomfortable Reaction After Interviewer Called Michael Cera 'Unattractive' Resurfaces

It’s the kind of interview moment that makes your skin crawl—and somehow, it only gets worse the longer it lingers.

Flash back to 2010, when Scott Pilgrim vs. the World was in full press junket mode, and its cast—Anna Kendrick, Kieran Culkin, and Michael Cera—were making the usual promotional rounds.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump; Kash Patel; Stephen Miller
Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Video Of Stephen Miller And Kash Patel Trying To One-Up Each Other With Their Fawning Praise Of Trump Is Giving Us The Ick

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and FBI Director Kash Patel had people cringing hard after they tried to one-up each other with their glowing praise of President Donald Trump during a roundtable about crime and public safety on Monday in Memphis, Tennessee.

Trump, who signed an executive order in September creating a task force dedicated to crime in Memphis, spoke in terms that gave insight into how his administration will use Memphis as a testing ground for its initiatives fighting urban crime.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Donald Trump; Joe Kent
@atrupar/X;

Trump Gets Brutal Reminder After Shaming Former Counterterrorism Chief For Remarrying Too Quickly After Wife's Death

President Donald Trump was given a blunt reminder of his own past after he shamed Joe Kent, the former National Counterterrorism Center director who recently resigned over the war with Iran, saying Kent had remarried too quickly after the death of his first wife.

Kent, a former Green Beret and political candidate with ties to right-wing extremists, was confirmed last July in a 52–44 vote to lead the National Counterterrorism Center, where he oversaw efforts to analyze and detect terrorist threats.

Keep Reading Show less