If you liked Dave Chappelle , you should watch Bill Burr.

The comedian, who first made his name by appearing on Chappelle's Show in 2004, carries the same brand of anti-PC comedy, and many conservatives will love him for it.

As film critic John Serba writes at Decider, "His stage persona is a blend of agent-of-chaos Joker and preadolescent troublemaker Dennis the Menace — the angry man and the mischievous child, the corrupted elder and the young naif.”

That doesn’t mean his new Netflix special, Paper Tiger, is inoffensive to the Right. In fact, most viewers will probably find something distasteful about it. But his critiques of feminism, #MeToo, and cancel culture will have many viewers smiling and nodding their heads.

To armchair movie critics who complained that Brian Cranston was cast as a quadriplegic: “That’s literally like watching a movie, ‘Why didn’t you have a murderer play a murderer? And how come the guy he shot, I saw him in another movie?’”

To white feminists who want to separate themselves from white male privilege: “It’s like, bitch, you’re sitting in the Jacuzzi with me!”

(When Burr began, “Someday there’s gonna be the first woman president,” the audience started to cheer, and he responded, “You don’t even know what her f--king platform is, and you automatically cheer!”)

On the backward trajectory of the #MeToo movement : “The stories were big in the beginning,” he said, “and then they just started tapering off. About six months in they just sounded like bad dates. It was like, ‘He was 10 minutes late, the chicken was cold, I think I was raped,' career over!”

On the mantra “believe women” : “It went from men not listening to women at all, to just this total overcorrection that anything they f--king said means it happened. They’ve got these hashtags like, ‘believe women.’ … What about the psychos? … How about you believe, like, 88%?”

Burr quips that this special may be his “last show ever,” but he told Forbes that he knows how to approach “the political correctness vibe that gets into crowds, where they just feel like they can’t laugh at something.” He explained, “So, you just make a joke, snap them out of it and then they act like regular people.”

The backlash against Paper Tiger has been much more muted than the response to Dave Chappelle’s Sticks & Stones, probably in part because Burr’s stand-up doesn't seem specifically geared to trigger every subgroup in America. On the subject of Chappelle, Burr told Forbes that the outrage was way overblown: “I feel like Dave Chappelle got more shit than pharmaceutical companies for a stand-up special. It’s like, ‘Forget about the crap that they did!’ You know?'”

Burr says he’s not trying to make a point with his non-PC language, though. After all, the name Paper Tiger means he’s trying to find humor in irony, though he makes a subtle point about whether our critiques of comedians have gone too far: “It's just making fun of the weight that is being put on things that don’t really have weight, all while we completely ignore very serious things.”