Comedian Druski dons ‘white face’ in controversial NASCAR skit



Comedian Druski is coming under fire for a “white face” performance in which he donned incredibly realistic makeup and proceeded to cosplay as a racist NASCAR fan.

The black comedian, 30, looked unrecognizable after he painted his entire face, arms and torso to a believably Caucasian tone — and even added some extra detail to the bit with a farmer’s tan sunburn at a recent NASCAR race.

Comedian Druski dressed up in “white face” portraying a racist redneck in his latest viral video. X/Druski

He completed the redneck character’s look with a mullet, beard, American flag cowboy hat and a pair of overalls with no shirt revealing American flag tattoos.

The skit — which has gone mega-viral — shows Druski, legal name Andrew Desbordes, palling around with tailgaters at the race,  talking in an exaggerated southern accent, toasting Budweisers with fellow white attendees and blasting Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the USA.”

The comedian painted his entire face and body for the NASCAR skit. X/Druski

In one part of the clip, which has been viewed more than 52 million times on X and received more than 468,000 likes, he disgustedly spits at the feet of a black man walking past him while learning against the hood of a car.

In another moment, he stops his truck beside a black man and asks him “You lost, boy?” When the man tells him he’s going to the NASCAR race, Druski leans out the window, spits, and tell him to “find something safe to do, boy.”

The 30-year-old comedian’s real name is Andrew Desbordes. Getty Images for ESSENCE

Druski’s 1.2 million followers on X marveled at his commitment to the bit.

“The white skin is one thing.. but adding the f–king sunburn farmers tan is going above and beyond,” one user commented.

“This is Tropical Thunder levels of race swap. How did he make it look so good,” another wondered, referencing the 2007 movie in which Robert Downey Jr. played an overzealous actor who wears blackface.

“Your makeup artist needs some sort of award,” one user wrote on the viral clip.

One user went as far to call the skit “probably the highest level of performance art this generation will ever witness.”

But others said his nakedly racist portrayal of a NASCAR fan was a low blow.



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