Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pete Davidson faces fallout over war-wound joke, but he need not apologize to Dan Crenshaw

- By Nardine Saad

“Saturday Night Live” cast member Pete Davidson laughed through his “Weekend Update” segment about midterm candidates Saturday night, which included a joke about a war veteran that landed with a thud.

However, the GOP candidate he insulted said he doesn’t want an apology for what he called a “meanspirit­ed” comment.

Ahead of Tuesday’s midterm elections, Mr. Davidson took aim at the appearance of a series of “gross” congressio­nal candidates. In particular, his joke about Dan Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL who wears an eye patch after losing an eye in Afghanista­n, was viewed as insensitiv­e to war veterans.

“You may be surprised to hear that he’s a congressio­nal candidate from Texas, not a hit man in a porno movie,” Mr. Davidson said during “Update,” laughing through his lines and then trailing off. “I know he lost his eye in war or whatever … whatever.”

Mr. Davidson acknowledg­ed that he shouldn’t be making fun of people’s looks (“I’m not insane … I look like I make vape juice in a bathtub. I look like a Dr. Seuss character went to prison”), but he still garnered a reaction from Mr. Crenshaw, who didn’t want an apology.

“Good rule in life: I try hard not to offend; I try harder not to be offended. That being said, I hope @nbcsnl recognizes that vets don’t deserve to see their wounds used as punchlines for bad jokes,” the Republican candidate tweeted on Sunday.

Speaking with TMZ, Mr. Crenshaw said that he wants the nation “to get away from this culture where we demand apologies every time someone misspeaks” and said “SNL” can do what it wants because it’s “feeling the heat from around the country right now.”

He thought the show could take a lesson, however.

“Veterans across the country probably don’t feel as though their wounds they received in battle should be the subject of a bad punchline for a bad joke,” Mr. Crenshaw said. “Here’s the real atrocity in all this: It wasn’t even funny. It was not original. It was not funny, it was just mean-spirited.”

“SNL” colleague Kenan Thompson also addressed the “unfortunat­e outcome” on Monday, saying that Mr. Davidson “definitely missed the mark.” But he tried to defend his castmate, too.

“I think he was more so commenting on the fact that the joke maybe didn’t land as hard as he wanted to as opposed to being like, ‘I don’t care about veterans,’” Mr. Thompson said on NBC’s “Today” show.

“My father’s a veteran, Vietnam, and I personally would never necessaril­y go there, but it’s tough when you’re fishing for jokes — like that’s how stand-ups feel, like there’s no real filters out there in the world when they’re trying to go for a great joke or whatever, and we try to respect that but at the same time, when you miss the mark, you’re offending people so you have to really be a little more aware, in my opinion.”

It’s been a rough few weeks for Mr. Davidson, who has been mostly making headlines for his breakup with pop star Ariana Grande.

He addressed that during the “Weekend Update” segment as well.

“I know some of you are curious about the breakup. But the truth is it’s nobody business, and sometimes things just don’t work out, and that’s OK,” he said. “She’s a wonderful, strong person, and I genuinely wish her all the happiness in the world. Now, please, go vote on Tuesday.”

One of Mr. Davidson’s barbs last week about the split appeared to contribute to Ms. Grande’s new diss track, “Thank U, Next,” which dropped just before “SNL” aired on Saturday. It takes aim at a quartet of Grande’s exes, including Mr. Davidson.

 ?? Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP ?? Pete Davidson speaks at a Comedy Central Roast at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, Calif. in 2015.
Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP Pete Davidson speaks at a Comedy Central Roast at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, Calif. in 2015.

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