Between the organic pup cup order, the blonde wig, and the podium speech about defending “all white men in America,” the internet decided what to think of Druski’s most recent sketch. The issue is that it formed multiple minds at once, and none of them are communicating with one another.
Comedian Drew Desbordes, better known online as Druski, uploaded a two-minute video to X on Wednesday night with the almost aggressively casual caption, “How Conservative Women in America act.” Wearing complete prosthetics, a white pantsuit, a cross necklace, and a blonde wig, he moved through a sequence of scenes that, even in the absence of a name, nearly instantly identified Erika Kirk to anyone who had been watching since September. The sparkler-lit mock rally entrance. The intense podcast appearance with the Bible in hand. The car song by Katy Perry. Tears are dabbing away. Druski never mentioned Kirk’s name, but each scene matched her real public appearances so closely that it was difficult to miss the implication.
The video had received more than 100 million views by Thursday night. It was surpassing 110 million by the time the majority of East Coast residents woke up on Friday morning, with 670,000 likes and 13,000 comments continuing to rise. It’s not a comedy sketch; rather, it’s the kind of reach that typically belongs to celebrity feuds or breaking news. That in and of itself provides some insight into the specific nerve it struck.
The backlash came almost as quickly as the number of views. After using the two words “Beneath contempt” to quote-tweet the video, Senator Ted Cruz’s post received 8.7 million views. The conversation would have been completely different if a white comedian had written about a Black widow whose husband was assassinated, according to Clay Travis, who framed it around race in a way that gained traction. 14 million people viewed his post. It was deemed disrespectful by Jon Root. Dom Lucre questioned why a family had to be sacrificed. The framing was consistent across all of these responses: Erika Kirk is a bereaved widow. Her spouse was killed. This is cruelty disguised as humor.
The Comedian, the Widow, and 110 Million Opinions
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Comedian’s Real Name | Drew Desbordes |
| Stage Name | Druski |
| Age | 31 |
| Known For | Viral comedy skits, social media personality |
| Notable Association | Friend of Justin Bieber; featured on Bieber’s album |
| Skit Title | “How Conservative Women in America Act” |
| Platform Posted | X (formerly Twitter) |
| Total Views (approx.) | 110 million+ |
| Likes | 670,000+ |
| Subject of Parody | Erika Kirk — CEO, Turning Point USA; widow of Charlie Kirk |
| Charlie Kirk | Conservative commentator; fatally shot, September 2025 |
| Erika Kirk’s Response | None publicly given |
| Previous Controversy | Mispronouncing Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s name at NFL Honors |
Reference Links: Newsweek — Druski Sparks Anger After Dressing as Erika Kirk Yahoo News — Erika Kirk Hasn’t Said a Word About Druski’s 110-Million-View Parody

That argument is genuinely complex, and it would be dishonest to completely reject it. After Charlie Kirk was shot and killed in September 2025, Erika Kirk assumed a very public role. She took over Turning Point USA and became a regular attendee at events, podcasts, and rallies in the months that followed. Regardless of one’s opinion of her grief or politics, the timing is accurate. The loss is genuine. Six months after a public assassination, Druski shared this sketch, and part of what he was making fun of were appearances Erika Kirk made while still clearly grieving the loss. Even for those who disagree with conservatives on many other issues, that context is important.
However, since the counterargument is just as difficult to dismiss, it’s also worthwhile to sit with the opposing viewpoint. One of the biggest conservative political groups in the US is led by Erika Kirk. She is employed by the government. She has made appearances on stages all over the nation, given speeches at prestigious gatherings, and addressed thousands of people about ideology and policy. The performances that Druski was parodying weren’t private moments of grief; rather, they were public appearances that were videotaped and had already gone viral enough for even his audiences without names to recognize them right away. Satire has a fairly well-established rule that public figures—especially political public figures—who voluntarily enter the public eye are vulnerable to precisely this kind of commentary. Although the widow and CEO framings do not contradict one another, they do lead to quite different conclusions regarding the location of the line.
The skit was dubbed “HILARIOUS” and described as “Lore-Accurate” by Candace Owens, who has been in a highly publicized feud with Kirk for months and has promoted her own contentious theories regarding Charlie Kirk’s death. Owens added that it was “how everybody’s feeling.” Given that it comes from the side of the aisle that sparked the most outrage, that specific endorsement is an odd data point in and of itself. Owens’ response garnered 1.6 million views, and the most illuminating aspect of the entire episode is witnessing conservatives divide sharply over whether to applaud or denounce the same sketch.
Druski has traversed this terrain before. In a previous NASCAR sketch, he wore full whiteface prosthetics, including a fake mullet, a fake sunburn, overalls, and a Monster energy drink. He wandered through the Southern 500 in South Carolina, mocking white Southern culture, and was generally well received by the actual attendees. Fans praised him for that sketch, calling the makeup “Tropic Thunder levels of race swap.” Additionally, it drew criticism for a scene in which his character spat at Black racegoers’ feet. Some fans felt that this detail went beyond satire and was less acceptable, even in a parody context.
The reason the Erika Kirk sketch landed with the particular force it did might have something to do with history. Druski has made a name for himself as a comedian who is prepared to use physical metamorphosis to inhabit and make fun of various cultural types, such as conservative women or white Southerners, depending on the category he is currently exploring. Technically, he’s good at it. The prosthetics work is truly impressive, and the performance in the Kirk sketch is not so much generic as it is specific enough to be thoroughly studied. The disagreement lies in the question of whether that specificity makes it more targeted mockery or sharper satire.
The fact that Erika Kirk herself has remained silent while this is happening in real time is instructive. Before being linked to a parody account, a post on X that claimed she had promised retaliation went viral. As of this writing, the real woman at the center of 110 million views has not responded publicly. Legal caution, strategic restraint, sincere indifference, or something else entirely could all be implied by that silence. However, it does mean that everyone but the person it was purportedly about has the loudest voices in this debate, which may be how online disputes typically operate. The debate the topic sparks takes precedence over the subject itself.
Druski has admitted to having to walk a tightrope in the past. He said to CBS Mornings following the Jaxon Smith-Njigba name incident earlier this year, which necessitated both a private apology that apparently went unanswered and a public admission of going too far: “When we talk about walking the line of comedy, you know sometimes you do have to take that chance.” Not everything will be a big hit. The viewer’s mental image of Erika Kirk when they hit play will probably determine whether this is a successful satire, needless cruelty, or something truly in between.
