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In this season, Dave will face a new challenge, as he will take a revenge against everyone who has done him wrong in the past. Dave decided to sign a sweet new deal to make that Meanwhile, people suddenly charge him a lot more money. Things will turn upside down because these people will charge him for even the most trivial things that used to cost very little in this moment
I was really nervous about how it would be, as [Dave] Chappelle was claiming that most of the unused skits where unfunny and not complete, but I was pleasantly surprised.
The skits from the first Lost Episode find the comedian in top form, picking on subjects ripe to be picked on. But - and here's where pop psychologists could have a field day - one of the topics is himself.
Sure, you'll laugh loud and long at this first "Lost" episode -- and, obviously, that's what's important. But these episodes have a memorial quality to them and, like fame itself, their impact feels fleeting.
The quality is not as consistently high nor the content quite as daring as Chappelle's show was at its best, but... he can still be crazily and courageously funny even in bite-size morsels.
Comedy Central made a huge mistake in airing unfinished (and mediocre) skits left behind when Chappelle bailed on the network two years ago. That's not to say I can't understand its motivation.
The sketches here are high-grade Chappelle: funny and surprising, if not a full-on riot, as his best work on the show has been. But they also tell the story of an intellectual with an esoteric imagination.