Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Tom Hanks’ son Chet questioned for speaking patois on Golden Globes red carpet

WATCH: Tom Hanks' son Chet attempted to speak patois on the red carpet at the Golden Globes – Jan 6, 2020

Tom Hanks’ son Chet confused many people after footage of him speaking with a Caribbean accent on the Golden Globes red carpet surfaced.

Story continues below advertisement

Ahead of his father accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award, Chet, 29, attempted to speak patois in a video filmed on the carpet.

“Big up the whole island massive, it’s your boy Chet coming straight from the Golden Globes,” Chet said.

Chet posted the video to his Instagram account, captioning it: “BIG UP FIMI WHOL FAMILY SOON COM AT DI AWARDS NA SEEN. CHUNE IN.”

He also posted a headline from CNN that read: “Tom Hanks’ son Chet is filmed speaking patois at the Golden Globes — and the internet is baffled.”

“Average citizens: damn this is scary I can’t believe we’re on the verge of WW3 let me check the news smh [shake my head]. @CNN: *crying laughing emoji*.”
Story continues below advertisement
Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Chet also posted a photo of himself with his father’s Golden Globe trophy.

“Bombaclaat lmaoooo *Jamaican flag emoji* s— goin brazy *crying laughing emoji*,” he wrote on the photo.

Chet Hanks / Instagram.
Story continues below advertisement

Many people took to Twitter to discuss Chet’s attempt at patois.

Chet, who has had roles in shows such as Shameless and Empire, previously came under fire in 2015 for using the n-word in a video.

Story continues below advertisement

“Look, I know the majority of y’all are not gonna get this because the history is still so fresh in our country. But hip hop isn’t about race. It’s about the culture you identify with. And can’t no one tell me what I can’t say,” he said.

“If I say n—a, I say it amongst people I love and who love me. If I say ‘f— y’all hatin’ ass n—-s,’ it’s because that’s really how I felt at the time. And I don’t accept society getting to decide what anybody can or can’t say. That’s something we call free speech.”

He addressed the video in 2018 and blamed his defence of using the word on his drug use and “trolling.”

“Low-key, like subconsciously, looking back on it now, I realize I was trolling. I thought, like, crazy antics and just wilding the f— out and doing some crazy s— was going to like spark my career,” Chet said on Van Lathan’s The Red Pill podcast.

Story continues below advertisement

Chet has been open about his battle with drug addiction in the past.

He says he is now sober after entering rehab and following the birth of his daughter Michaiah in 2016.

Curator Recommendations
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article