Andrew Schulz Says Kendrick Lamar Jokes Are Fair Game After Apparent ‘Wacced Out Murals’ Diss
Written by djfrosty on March 11, 2025

Andrew Schulz isn’t backing off from Kendrick Lamar after feeling targeted by the rapper on “Wacced Out Murals” last year.
Four months after Dot rapped “Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law” on the GNX opener — a line Schulz and many fans assumed was aimed at the comedian due to his controversial quips about white men who “get slapped” by their Black girlfriends on an August episode of his Flagrant podcast — Schulz once again addressed the situation while guesting on The Breakfast Club Monday (March 10).
First, the comedian doubled down on his past remarks about wanting to “make love” to Lamar, saying in reference to the rapper’s 2025 Super Bowl Halftime Show outfit, “When I saw those jeans, I was like, ‘Bing-bop-boom-boom-boom-bop-bam,’” quoting the musician’s “peekaboo.”
Schulz had previously responded to Lamar’s apparent diss on a December episode of Flagrant by joking that he would like to have sex with the hip-hop titan, adding at the time that “the only thing [Lamar] could do is decide if it’s consensual or not.” Three months later on The Breakfast Club, he explained his intention behind the offensive comment: “People made that s–t racism so fast. I’m just saying he’s little … He’s itty bitty, so why is he telling people he’s gonna kill my friends?”
The stand-up went on to say that such jokes are fair game because, he claims, the Compton native was the one who “took it there” in the first place with his incendiary “Wacced Out Murals” lyrics. Also on the song, Lamar raps, “The n—as that c–n, the n—as that being groomed, slide on both of them,” which Schulz took to mean as Lamar inciting violence against his friends, specifically Breakfast Club host Charlamagne Tha God and Schulz’s Flagrant co-host Alexx Media.
“What does slide mean to y’all?” Schulz said on The Breakfast Club. “If you say kill my friends, everything after that is fine. You took it there … I don’t like this idea that like, I’m this big bully. You told your people to kill my friends. That’s the potential interpretation.”
For the record, Charlamagne isn’t as convinced as Schulz is that Dot was coming for them at all. “I appreciate my friend trying to stick up for me, but I don’t think he was talking about us,” the radio host responded after Schulz said his piece, laughing.
Billboard has reached out to Kendrick Lamar for comment.
The 22-time Grammy winner has never confirmed which “white comedian” he was talking about on “Wacced Out Murals.” The rapper surprise-dropped GNX in late November, and the album has spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 so far.
But while Schulz didn’t take kindly to the perceived diss — and is still talking about it months later — the comedian did put some respect on Lamar’s name on The Breakfast Club. “This whole thing got blown out of proportion,” he said. “To say [Lamar] is not fantastic at what he does is ridiculous, and I have a lot of respect for anyone who puts things out for judgement. That takes balls and I admire people that have balls.”
Watch Schulz share his thoughts on Lamar and “Wacced Out Murals” on The Breakfast Club above.