Seth Rogen Unloads on Kanye During Netflix Festival
The crowd expected jokes. They probably didn’t expect a full-on public roasting of Kanye West.
But that’s exactly what unfolded at Los Angeles’ famous Greek Theatre this week when Seth Rogen and Jon Stewart took the stage together during Netflix’s “Netflix Is a Joke” festival and turned their attention toward the controversial rapper.
And they were not subtle about it.
At one point during the show, the pair reportedly boiled their feelings about Kanye West down to three simple words: “F*** Kanye West.”
Yeah. The audience definitely heard that loud and clear.
According to reports from inside the venue, Rogen appeared to reference Kanye’s long-running antisemitism controversies while joking about how criticism works in Hollywood. The actor — who is Jewish — reportedly joked that he had said controversial things about Jewish people in the past and somehow received more backlash than the artist behind the song “Heil Hitler.”
The line immediately drew reactions from the crowd.
And then things got even more brutal.
Stewart reportedly followed with a sharper jab, mocking Kanye’s past comments about Adolf Hitler while comparing them to the rapper’s seemingly endless resentment toward Pete Davidson.

“But seriously, f*** that guy,” Stewart reportedly said. “He was like, ‘Hitler was misunderstood, we’ve got to forgive Hitler.’ And I’m like, I don’t think I need to listen to anybody who thinks Hitler needs to be forgiven, but is still mad at Pete Davidson.”
That punchline hit especially hard given Kanye’s very public feud with Davidson during the comedian’s relationship with Kim Kardashian.
And honestly? The irony practically wrote itself.
The moment instantly reignited debate around Kanye’s controversial public image — particularly as the rapper has recently been attempting what many see as a redemption campaign following years of antisemitic remarks and Nazi-related controversies.
As previously reported, Kanye recently took out a full-page advertisement in The Wall Street Journal apologizing for his behavior and claiming he is now a “reformed antisemite.”
He has also reportedly visited a Jewish Human Rights Center while trying to repair relationships and revive his global touring plans.

But not everyone seems ready to forgive and forget.
In fact, Rogen and Stewart’s comments arrived just days after Dave Chappelle sparked controversy of his own by bringing Kanye onstage during a performance at The Comedy Store in Los Angeles.
That appearance divided fans online almost instantly.
Some viewers praised Chappelle for showing support during Kanye’s public fallout, while others accused the comedian of helping rehabilitate someone whose past rhetoric caused genuine harm.
Now, Rogen and Stewart appear to be making it crystal clear where they stand.
And they’re not exactly extending olive branches.
What made the Greek Theatre moment explode online, though, wasn’t just the profanity or insults — it was how casually direct the criticism felt.
No vague references.
No carefully worded Hollywood diplomacy.
Just two comedians openly torching one of the world’s most controversial celebrities in front of a packed audience.
Fans immediately flooded social media with reactions once clips and quotes from the show started circulating.
One user posted, “Jon Stewart saying Kanye can forgive Hitler but not Pete Davidson is the funniest thing I’ve heard all week.”
Another wrote, “Seth Rogen is saying what half of Hollywood probably wants to say out loud.”
But the internet had thoughts, and they were definitely not unified.
Some Kanye supporters accused the comedians of piling onto the rapper during a period where he appears to be publicly apologizing and attempting to change his image.
Others argued the criticism was entirely deserved given the severity of Kanye’s previous remarks.
It’s unclear whether Kanye will respond publicly to the jokes — but history suggests he probably won’t ignore them forever.
And if he does clap back? Social media will absolutely explode again.
For newer readers, Kanye’s controversies over the past several years have dramatically shifted public perception around the artist once widely celebrated as one of music’s most innovative figures. Between antisemitic statements, Nazi imagery, inflammatory interviews, and erratic public appearances, the rapper has faced business fallout, canceled partnerships, and widespread backlash globally.
Countries including France and the U.K. have reportedly shut down or disrupted planned concert appearances connected to the controversy.
Still, Kanye continues attempting a comeback.
Whether audiences are willing to separate his music from his behavior remains one of the biggest questions hanging over pop culture right now.
At the center of all this is something deeper than celebrity beef.
For comedians like Rogen and Stewart — both Jewish public figures with massive audiences — Kanye’s comments clearly crossed a line that apology ads and public visits may not easily erase.
And that emotional weight was obvious onstage.
Even while delivering jokes, the anger underneath them felt very real.
The wildest twist? Kanye’s effort to rebuild his reputation may actually be fueling even more public conversations about the damage caused in the first place.
Every apology seems to reopen the debate all over again.
One thing’s certain — Seth Rogen and Jon Stewart didn’t show up to the Greek Theatre ready to forgive Ye. And judging by that crowd reaction, a lot of people in the audience weren’t exactly ready either.

