Nick Cannon called out three comedians for wearing blackface in the past.

The entrepreneur and television personality took to Instagram pointing out that Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel and Sarah Silverman have all performed in blackface. This follows a string of Virginia politicians deep in scandal for wearing blackface in the past or supporting racist ideology.

“Are these your Kings of Late Night???” Cannon, 38, wrote on Instagram with clips of Fallon in blackface playing Chris Rock and Kimmel also in blackface playing NBA star Karl Malone. “You know I’m always on the side of the comedian and never pander to the sensitive, but I feel there needs to be some ‘truth & reconciliation’ discussions and teachable moments amongst our communities.”

Cannon, who is a student at Howard University, says he’s open to talking it all out.

In a pervious post, he also called out Silverman for wearing blackface in a comedy sketch. She addressed the incident years ago on “Watch What Happens Live” calling her behavior “aggressively stupid.”

Reps for both Fallon and Kimmel did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Silverman’s rep said, “You should watch her show on Hulu, ‘I Love You, America,’ where she addressed it in great length.”

While fans are feverishly searching for YouTube clips, others are attempting to take Cannon to task by wondering about Cannon’s own behavior dressing up as a white man or other comedians dressing as white people. Fans are also commeting “What about ‘White Chicks?’”— a 2004 movie in which Shawn and Marlon Wayans pretended to be white women.

Cannon responded with a post of him dressed as a white man with the caption across the photo “Now y’all mad??”

“America, There is NO such thing as ‘WhiteFace’ just like there is no such thing as ‘Reverse Racism.’ BlackFace and Racism are rooted in and are byproducts of the Institutionalized Oppression of a subjugated people,” Cannon said. “The racist and severely damaging ‘Jim Crow laws’ received its name from the Blackface minstrel movement of the 19th century and proceeds to cause pain to this day.”

He also called out Gucci and other brands for their recent products resembling blackface.

“These recent revealings of people painting themselves black or brown and speaking in broken slang in an attempt to be humorous or have fun; as if our culture is some sort of party trick or costume is unacceptable,” he added. “If you don’t understand this, then it probably means you are or benefit from that elite group of privileged oppressors that we speak of.”