Chestnut recounts trouble with increasingly hostile responses from American audiences over his criticism and jokes about President
George W. Bush and the
Bush administration due to a post-
9/11 rise in nationalism. Chestnut admits to being antagonistic and inflammatory, and includes stories of altercations with audience members in his act. He persevered, however, and cites eventual popular disenchantment with the
Occupation of Iraq as the reason for more positive reactions to later, similar criticism. In May 2004, Chestnut recorded his first CD at The Comedy Club on State, entitled
I Was Funny... Now Pay Me, written and performed by himself, and produced by Austin Katt. A series of delays kept the CD from being released, including the suicide of close friend Eric Harnisch. Chestnut canceled shows in order to help lay his friend to rest. He wrote Harnisch's
epitaph, His wit was exceeded only by his intelligence, his intelligence only by his selflessness, his selflessness only by his kindness, his kindness only by his extraordinary life, and his life only by those he touched with it. Eventually, delays kept the CD
I Was Funny... Now Pay Me from mass release. == Religion, politics, and social commentary ==