New Details on Chevy Chase's Messy COMMUNITY Fallout and a Very Ugly Wrap Party Moment
The upcoming authorized CNN documentary I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not hasn’t been released yet, but it’s already stirring up some interesting conversations.
The film digs back into one of the most infamous behind-the-scenes implosions in modern TV comedy history, laying out new details surrounding Chevy Chase’s abrupt exit from Community and the chain reaction that followed.
According to People magazine, the documentary features commentary from Community director Jay Chandrasekhar, who recalls being on set the night everything finally blew up.
He says Chase had an on-set meltdown tied to the long-rumored 2012 incident involving co-star Yvette Nicole Brown, where Chase allegedly used the N-word during a conversation. Chandrasekhar notes he didn’t personally hear the exchange but confirms the fallout that followed.
“I was there, directing, the night that Chevy Chase got fired from Community.”
The incident reportedly stemmed from a scripted hand puppet bit involving blackface tied to Chase’s character, Pierce Hawthorne.
As previously reported, Chase had grown increasingly frustrated with what he felt was the racist direction of Pierce. During a heated discussion, he argued that the writers would eventually have his character say the N-word. He didn’t censor himself when making the point.
In the CNN documentary, Chandrasekhar explains how the situation escalated once Brown left the set.
“I know that there was a history between [Chase and Brown] around race, and she got up and stormed out of there. Chevy storms off, so the producer is like, ‘We need Yvette in the scene, right?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, she’s in the next scene.’ And he goes, ‘Well, she won’t come out unless Chevy apologizes to her.’ ”
That apology never came. Instead, Chandrasekhar says Chase doubled down.
“He goes, ‘You know, me and Richard Pryor, I used to call Richard Pryor the N-word, and he used to call me The Honky, and we loved each other.’ And I’m like, ‘I know, man, I love that bit.’ I said, ‘You know, can we just have a little apology?’ He goes, ‘For what?’”
Once news of the incident leaked, things unraveled fast. Chandrasekhar recalls Chase returning to set in a panic.
“He came storming onto the set, and he goes, ‘Who f*cked me over?’ … ‘My career is ruined! I’m ruined!’ Like, it’s a full meltdown. ‘F*ck all of you!’ ”
The director adds, “And I’m like, ‘Alright, let’s shoot the scene.’ He never ended up coming back after that.”
Chase would later issue an apology and officially depart Community after Season 4 in 2013, aside from one brief appearance the following year.
The documentary also revisits a moment that’s circulated in Hollywood lore for years but now gets firsthand context. Chandrasekhar describes an uncomfortable scene at a wrap party that crossed from awkward into cruel.
“It was out in the open that Chevy Chase was a little difficult on Community, and I’m being nice. People were talking about it, enough that Dan did that thing at the wrap party.”
That “thing” involved Community creator Dan Harmon leading a chant directed at Chase as he entered the party. The moment reportedly triggered the infamous profanity-filled voicemail Chase later left for Harmon.
Chase’s daughter, Caley Chase, who attended the party with her parents, recalls the moment in the documentary.
“My dad was super excited to bring me and my mom to the wrap party. We walk in, Dan, he had had some drinks. He had gotten the whole cast and crew to yell, ‘F*ck you, Chevy!’ ‘F*ck you, Chevy!’ ”
She continues, “I’m there, he’s showing his daughter, like, ‘This is the show I did,’ and we walk in to ‘F*ck you, Chevy!’ That’s rough. And mean.”
With I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not set to premiere on CNN, the documentary looks ready to reopen a chapter many fans thought was long closed. Whether it brings clarity, closure, or just more uncomfortable truths, one thing’s clear. The story of Chevy Chase and Community is still messy.