Druski will headline this year’s BET Awards as host, stepping into one of the ceremony’s most visible roles when it returns on June 28.
The announcement, made Thursday, signals a night likely shaped by his loose, improvisational style rather than a tightly scripted program. In a video introducing the news, he made clear the tone he intends to set. “I told BET if I’m hosting, we gon’ do this my way,” he said.
What followed was a string of mock directives delivered with comic precision: “Rule No. 1: Jamie Foxx, take that big ass hat off. Rule No. 2: Sexyy Red? No leggings, rompers, or bodysuits. We don’t need no wrestlers, no wrestlers on the red carpet. Black suit and tie. Rule No. 3: YNs? Take the ski masks off, man. Stop. Stop it. Rule No. 4: Megapastors, listen. I know y’all on my back right now. I’ve been getting the DMs and the threats. Just leave it up to God. We gon’ lock them doors, and can’t nobody get out. Welcome to the 2026 BET Awards.”
The booking arrives at a moment when his profile has broadened well beyond internet comedy. Over the past year, Druski has moved between digital sketches, live appearances and television, building a following that cuts across platforms. His recent contributions to The Voice have introduced his humor to a wider audience, even as his online work continues to circulate widely. The through line has been a style that leans on timing and character, often blurring the line between satire and performance.
Viral Reach Brings Attention—and Misinformation
One recent example underscores that reach. In March, a sketch built around exaggerated political archetypes drew nearly 200 million views on X, extending far beyond his usual audience. The moment took an unexpected turn when the platform’s chatbot misidentified an image from the clip, briefly fueling confusion online.
That attention also invited misinformation. Posts soon circulated with inaccurate claims about his family background, using images pulled from his social media to support them. A representative later clarified to Complex that the individual pictured was a childhood neighbor, not a relative, closing out a short-lived but widely shared rumor.

