Comedy Legends and Peritoneum Jeff Dunham Believe that once President Donald Trump is re-elected, American comedians can sigh.
The veteran stand-up star is known on the stage through a bunch of peritoneal episodes, and he believes in Fox News figures Trump’s election He said it was a huge blow to cancel culture, which he said was stopping comedians from making jokes.
“But now, as Trump returns to the office, you just feel that weight as a comedian … You can now joke about what we used to joke about.”
Dunham, holding the Guinness World Record Most tickets are for sale A stand-up comedy tour (2007-2010) in his Insanity Tour (2007-2010) admitted to Fox News Digital that he believes he has been unable to joke or comment on certain topics in the past few years due to the rise of cancel culture.

Legendary comedian Jeff Dunham said he was not too worried about publicizing his ideas after President Trump was re-election. (Rick Kern/Contributor)
He said that talking about politics or promoting “common sense” ideas in public places has been “painful”, and the development of this dynamic has been going on because sensitive groups want to punish or shamefully illustrate what they think they think is politically incorrect.
Dunham even said the comedy (he called it one of the “last form of freedom of speech” – has really been strangled in recent years until Trump’s victory.
“And, over the past few years, that fact has been tied up and almost really squeezed – really shocked – it’s really refreshing now, at least it can feel like you can do a real stand-up comedy right now.”
The comic says that only a lot of offensive material is ideal.
“For me, a comedian brought it online,” he said. “He knows his audience, his or her audience. You put it online and step in a little bit.
He added: “That’s why they keep coming back because what they hear isn’t heard anywhere else.”

Comedian and Ventriloquist Jeff Dunham tells Fox News Digital about President Trump’s election, breaking the comedy culture of cancel culture. (Fox News figures)
Duhham noted that over the years, people have offended his comedy, with some accusing peritoneal words of being crucial to him representing racial stereotypes. Bubba J in his puppet lineup, the comics’ website described as “pride in his countryman legacy.” Another is José Jalapeño on a stick, the pepper and some beards of Mexican heritage, most notoriously, the dead terrorist, initially portrayed as Al Qaeda terrorist mastermind Osama Bin Laden.
The comic admits that he has always wanted the characters to be stereotypes.
Well, when it comes to characters, it is invented that characters are responding to what is going on – like I said – it is responding to what is going on in society and the laughter of the audience I think. Then, it is actually in topics and topics that people can relate to the characters. Characters related to you.
“You have an old, grumpy old man, he’s a grumpy old man,” he said, adding, “You know you have this country man, you know you know? Border white junk. Yes, people understand that. Then they expect some material and some personality and it works for you. It’s like a sitcom.”
Dunham is not afraid to let his puppet talk about politics on stage. In some shows, he retuned Walter’s impression of former President Joe Biden, and in others he had him wear a blonde wig to make fun of President Trump. “Yes, Walter dressed up like Trump and then he dressed up as video like Biden,” he called political humor “the joy of kindness.”
The comic also talks about the issue of really pushing the border with Achmed, which he said was his “response to 9-11.” Dunham mentioned that he refused to play safely with the character and said he decided: “I’m not going to try it somewhere in Hawaii or Juno, Alaska or California. I’m going to count here.
He said when he introduced the role at the New York club, as Osama bin Laden, “it was like God took the vacuum and sucked all the air out of the room.” But, he recalls, the moment he took out a funny skeleton puppet and posted the character’s now infamous slogan “I Kill You!”, the show “can’t be better.”
He added: “I mean, it couldn’t be better.”

Jeff Dunham and one of his infamous characters, Achmed, the dead terrorist. (NBC/Contributor)
Dunham talks freely about the political situation in California, living with his wife and children.
“I just feel like this beautiful state is politically trapped in the foundation,” he said. “It’s unfortunate because it’s one of the most beautiful states in the country.”
Dunham moved to Los Angeles in the late 1980s In power Over the past few years, terrible decisions have been made and making life ridiculous, which could be another way. ”
He doesn’t want to get along with California’s progressive population, often associated with it, noting that there is a vibrant conservative population there who wants to bring the country back to “common sense.”
He said he considered himself among the Californians during the 2024 election, “waving their hands and saying, ‘You know, I live here too, I’m going to vote in another way, we have a chance to bring the country back to some kind of common sense, common sense.”
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He added that he did not move out of the state because he thought “it could go back to some sense of normality and sanity.”
Dunham continued that he would not be open to what happened in his state until the last election. “Will I talk about this candid a year ago? Probably not because it’s still dangerous,” he said, adding that the comedians can push the boundaries with humor again as Trump wins.
Still, Dunham believes that people have learned a little from the speech policing period at that time.
He said: “What did we learn? Yes.
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