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Karen’s shocking drunken Christmas tirade against her neighbor in gated community

Karen’s shocking drunken Christmas tirade against her neighbor in gated community

A black music producer recorded the moment a white woman launched into a tirade against him as she tried to block him from entering her gated community.

Isaac Hayes III, who is the son of the late soul singer Isaac Hayes, shared a video on Instagram of a white woman questioning him as he tried to enter her neighborhood in Atlanta, Georgia.

“Are you trying to get in?” Who are you? I’m on the board of directors,” says the woman, who appears drunk.

“You drive around here like a bat out of hell, you get in and out…Fuck you, everything is ridiculous, we have dogs, we have people and you don’t even care.”

The woman then seems to say, “Why aren’t you white?”

“I’ve never seen a Karen in the wild,” Hayes wrote on Instagram.

“Well, tonight I had my first close encounter with one. I stayed calm, didn’t make any sudden movements and ran away as quickly as possible.

“As well as preventing me from entering my community, cursing me and telling me I should be ‘White.’ It’s quite surreal. White supremacy will collapse throughout 2025. Be careful.

A Black music producer has shared the moment a white woman tried to block him from entering his gated community in Atlanta, Georgia.

The woman then seems to say, “Why aren’t you white?”

The incident happened in the upscale Cobblestone gated community in Brookhaven, in the Atlanta area, where townhomes cost around half a million dollars.

Hayes III made headlines this year for his objection to Donald Trump’s use of his father’s song, Hold On, I’m Coming.

Hayes Jr, who died in 2008, was the third black person to win an Oscar when he won best song for the 1979 film Shack.

The Grammy Award winner also played the character Chef on Comedy Central’s South Park from 1997 to 2006.

In September, a federal judge in Atlanta ruled that Trump and his campaign must stop using the song while the family of one of the song’s co-authors filed a lawsuit against the former president for his use.

The estate of Isaac Hayes Jr. filed a lawsuit in October, alleging that Trump, his campaign and several of his allies had violated his copyrights and must pay damages.

Isaac Hayes III, pictured, is the son of the late soul singer Isaac Hayes

The incident happened in the upscale Cobblestone gated community in Brookhaven, in the Atlanta area, where townhomes cost around half a million dollars.

Hayes III made headlines this year for his objection to Donald Trump’s use of his father’s song, Hold On, I’m Coming. Hayes Jr is pictured in 2007

After a hearing on the estate’s request for an emergency preliminary injunction, District Judge Thomas Thrash ruled that Trump must stop using the song, but he denied a request to force the campaign to remove all existing videos containing the song.

Hayes, who died in 2008 at the age of 65, and David Porter co-wrote Hold On, I’m Coming, a 1966 hit for the soul duo Sam and Dave.

Hayes’ son, Isaac Hayes III, told reporters he was “very grateful and happy” with the judge’s decision.

“I want this to serve as an opportunity for other artists who do not want their music used by Donald Trump or other political entities and who continue to fight for the rights and copyrights of music artists ” he said.

Hayes Jr, who died in 2008, was the third black person to win an Oscar. The Grammy Award winner also played the character Chef on Comedy Central’s South Park from 1997 to 2006.

Hayes III is a successful music producer and the founder of Fanbase, an app that helps creators monetize their content.

DailyMail.com has contacted Hayes III for comment on this story.