A hipster Brooklyn real estate agent was caught on video spewing racial vitriol at a black bouncer in front of a Bushwick bar early Friday morning.

Video shows Chris Giardina, 29, unleashing an expletive-laden string of epithets, including the n-word, at a bouncer and another man outside Wyckoff Avenue performance space The House of Yes early Friday morning.

“Touch me again you f—ing n–r,” Boston-area native Giardina can be heard shouting at the stoic bouncer, according to cell phone video.

Then he turns to a man shooting footage of the incident and shouts a slur against Latinos: “Yeah I said it, ‘cause he’s punching me you f––ing s–c.”

Giardina appears to be on the phone trying to get police to arrest the doorman, who he claims hit him after he exited the wrong door as he left House of Yes.

“Get a cop here now or I’m going to end up burying this black guy,” Giardina whines into the phone.

“I will bury you,” he repeatedly shouts at the bouncer. “You hit me in the face like a dirty, f–g black person. You’ll lose your job and you’ll lose your house. Trust me.

“What is this, Harlem?” muses Giardina, who works as a real estate agent for hipster apartment broker MySpace NYC.

Reached by phone Sunday, Giardina claimed he is not a racist because someone else used the n-word first.

“The word that I used, that I’m embarrassed by using, was being thrown around the entire time. It was already in the air,” he told The Post when reached by phone Sunday. “It doesn’t make me a racist; it makes me an idiot.”

He said he couldn’t recall anyone else using the slur against Latinos, however.

Giardina admitted he was drunk at the time, but claimed the video was “manipulated” to make him look bad and that the crowd outside the bar was “actually on my side” until he started dropping racial epithets.

MySpace NYC fired Giardina over the video, according to principal broker Shawn Mullahy.

“I was very disappointed in the video to say the least,” he told The Post. “I was embarrassed and saddened by it. It’s not in line with the company culture or values.”

The House of Yes could not immediately be reached.

There were no arrests, according to police.