Wyclef Jean says Sean Penn was too coked up to meet him in Haiti

Haitian singer Wyclef Jean, a candidate for the next presidential election in Haiti, attends a news conference before his concert at the Antilliaanse Feesten music festival in Hoogstraten in this file picture taken August 13, 2010. Jean is not on the list of approved candidates who satisfy legal requirements to run in the country's Nov. 28 presidential election, an electoral official said on August 19, 2010. Picture taken August 13.   REUTERS/Sebastien Pirlet/Files (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT POLITICS)

A few months ago, Wylcef Jean threw his hat into the ring to be a nominee in Haiti’s presidential election. Wyclef made major waves in America – he is perhaps the best-known Haitian in the American media’s mind, so he got lots of play. Unfortunately, in the end, Wyclef was ineligible to be a presidential nominee because of some regulations regarding residency – it seemed Wyclef had been living in new Jersey too long, and not Port-au-Prince. So just like that, Wyclef’s bid was over. And now it’s time for Wylcef to call out the haters.

Clef’s ex-Fugee friend Pras made an impassioned and well-spoken argument for why Clef shouldn’t be Haiti’s president, but one of the biggest cut-downs was made by Sean Penn, who sat down with Larry King. Sean has become something of an honorary Haitian, and has spent months working in Haiti post-earthquake. Here’s part of what Sean said after Wyclef announced his bid:

I feel that it’s important to say that while President Preval himself has made very clear the value of Wyclef’s voice as a song writer, as someone with whom the youth is quite enamored with, and appointing him, not as he said electing him, ambassador at large, which took place, in fact, three years ago, which does not qualify him as someone who has had residency for the five consecutive years necessary — but that’s an issue of rule of law that we will or won’t respect in our donations, or lack thereof, to campaigns abroad.

… I’m not accusing Wyclef Jean of being on opportunist. I don’t know the man. But I think it’s extremely important that we pay great attention to both the individuals in the United States who are enamored with him, maybe not for his political strengths, and in particular for corporate interests that are enamored with him, and those that may themselves be opportunists on the back of the Haitian people.

Right now, I worry that this is a campaign that is more about a vision of flying around the world, talking to people, as he said. It’s certainly not one of the youth drafting him… What the Haitian people need now is a leader who is genuinely willing to sacrifice.

And one of the reasons I don’t know very much about Wyclef Jean is I haven’t seen or heard anything of him in these last six months that I’ve been in Haiti. I think he’s an important voice. I hope he doesn’t sacrifice that voice by taking the eye off the very devastating realities on the ground and the very difficult strategic future that it’s got in putting itself back together…

[From CNN]

So it’s clear that Sean at that point had never met Wyclef, and probably had no interest in meeting him either. But now it’s Clef’s turn to give his side of the story for why they never met – apparently, it had something to do with Sean being a cokehead…?

“If I was president….I got a message for Sean Penn, maybe he ain’t see me in Haiti because he was too busy sniffing cocaine. I got a message for Praswell, even though you don’t want to support me, I got love for you, even though you only kicked eight bars in the Fugees.”

[From Gawker]

Clef is kind of a whiny little baby, right? It’s not Sean Penn’s fault that Clef didn’t meet the residency requirements. That being said, if Sean is a cokehead, it wouldn’t surprise me. At all.

The Pras dis was rough too, right? UGH. Clef needs to get a grip.

40744, WASHINGTON, D.C - Wednesday May 19, 2010. Academy Award winning actor Sean Penn testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on relief efforts in Haiti Wednesday morning on Capitol Hill. Photograph: Nick Gingold, PacificCoastNews.com

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI - AUGUST 19: Singer Wyclef Jean as he speaks with a journalist in the home he is staying in while he waits to hear if he is eligible to run for the November 28th presidential election on August 19, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Haiti's electoral authorities are scheduled to release the list of the presidential candidates that can run in the November 28, 2010 election on August 20. There is 1.5 million people still living in tent camps and less than four percent of the rubble from collapsed buildings has been cleared since the earthquake, that killed some 200,000 people. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Singer Wyclef Jean attends a news conference before his concert at the Antilliaanse Feesten music festival in Hoogstraten, in this August 13, 2010 file photo. The Haitian hip-hop star and presidential hopeful turned to song on August 26 to accuse outgoing President Rene Preval of engineering his rejection as a candidate for Haiti's November election. Local radio stations were broadcasting a song by Jean in Creole in which he called for the jailing of electoral officials who last week disqualified him and for the first time directly blamed Preval for being banned from the Nov. 28 vote. REUTERS/Sebastien Pirlet/Files  (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT POLITICS)

Haitian singer Wyclef Jean, a candidate for the next presidential election in Haiti, attends a news conference before his concert at the Antilliaanse Feesten music festival in Hoogstraten, August 13, 2010.  REUTERS/Sebastien Pirlet (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT POLITICS)

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37 Responses to “Wyclef Jean says Sean Penn was too coked up to meet him in Haiti”

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  1. gloaming says:

    This is the best Wyclef Jean can come up with?

    To resort to this makes him look like a dumbass, especially following Sean Penn’s beautifully articulated appearance on Larry King.

    Hardly “Presidential” Wyclef

  2. Chris says:

    He needs to get a grip. I am losing a lot of respect for him. I too would believe Sean Penn is a cokehead but that’s not the point and his comebacks are lame and unnecessarily harsh at the same time.

  3. e-non says:

    i seriously doubt that penn is paying himself from the proceeds of the funds he’s raised on behalf of haiti….

    back to you wyclef, self-appointed savior of the haitian diaspora.

  4. California Surfer says:

    Sean Penn is totally looking like Mel Gibson these days!

  5. di butler says:

    Penn is a whackadoodle a$$hat, Wyclef seems like a tit. Everyone loses.

  6. mln says:

    Sean had no right to diss a politician in a country that wasn’t his but Wyclef hardly can be considered presidential for calling someone a cokehead.

  7. Po says:

    Unfortunately, even though I think Sean Penn usually comes off looking like an ass I would have to agree with him. Haiti does not need a president like Wyclef. But the question should be who is going to do the job.

  8. Snarf says:

    Yeah a shady singer with an equally dubious charity is now resorting to name calling, bitter that his plans were torpedoed. Haiti really dodged a bullet with this guy, non?

  9. Dhavy says:

    Oh stop crying Wyclef! Everyone knew that you wanting to become Haiti’s president was like Lady Gaga taking over Facebook-a popularity contest

    Wyclef might care about his native country but Penn seems like he’s the one doing all the hardwork so that the Haitians get the help they deserve. Haiti would bee in a worse place if Wyclef was president

  10. Fluffy Kitten Tail says:

    Both men are disgusting.

  11. Lway says:

    @ Dhavy – couldn’t have said it better myself!

  12. geenie says:

    OH STFU Wyclef. If I recall your fund organization was accused of embezzling money. All of a sudden you have an interest in running for President. Give us all a break. You’re no Oprah.

  13. yugga says:

    Of course a hip hop reggae musician would never do coke.

    Penn is in Haiti right now helping Haitians.

    Where is his accuser?….

  14. Whatever says:

    I’ve heard that Sean is into coke before, so no big surprise there. He has more in common with Mel than his looks, he’s also an allegedly abusive douche. But, people still worship him. Go figure.

  15. JC126 says:

    He’s full of it.

  16. Sarah says:

    I really wish simpletons would stop using the idiotic “I heard” on comment posts. If you were not there, you do not know a thing. “I heard” = “bullshit.”

    On topic, Wyclef was not qualified and by his childish antics, Haiti is lucky this buffoon was ineligible.

  17. Johnthing says:

    Mr. Penn looks like a grotty little man.

  18. hellen says:

    Can’t stand Sean Penn, even though he is doing good for the people of Haiti – but Wyclef’s argument sounds like sour grapes. Maybe none of it is true, Wyclef’s just p*ssy about being dissed in public.

    Agree with Snarf: Haiti dodged a bullet.

  19. Shy says:

    Wyclef is a stupid poser. Does he even understand what it means to be President? That he will have to know all the problems, sigh millions of paper, meet millions of politics. The foreign, the local. There are so much problems. And they all need to be solved. And he has to know those problems. And that idiot is not even living in Haiti. Probably visited it couple of times in year.

  20. Bob says:

    Penn’s drug problems not only cost him his marriage to Robin Wright, but are starting to cost him parts in movies. People are getting tired of his Mel Gibson-style crazyness. Hope he gets help soon.

  21. nycmom10024 says:

    I’ve said it before on one of these post and I will say it again, Penn’s dislike of Wyclef stems from politics and politcal connections.

    Penn is very liberal and Wyclef is more moderateon most issues. Penn came from an upper class backround, Wyclef’s childhood comes nowhere close to affluence.

    Where we come from influences us all. It is easy to have noblesse oblige when you have been a have all your life.

    In my professional life I have regular contact with people that respect Wyclef as a businessman and his goals.
    I don’t have personal contact with professional contacts of Sean Penn, so I can only rely on heresay. But I think it is safe to say they do not have much business or personal lap.

  22. Kelly says:

    I don’t consider myself a ‘hater’ of celebrities, however, I make an exception for Sean Penn. I absolutlely disdain him. Every time he opens his mouth, it’s all about him, painting himself to be the savior of all that is unjust, but with a smug, mean, arrogant, rant-like, holier than thou attitude. His ego seems to have no bounds. When is the last time he actually smiled in public?? He’s a mess.

  23. d says:

    how presidential of Wyclef. I believe he showed his true colors there. Penn may be a rotten human being as a husband (spec only from gossips, I don’t know for a fact), but he does seem t be putting his money and time and effort where his mouth is as far as Haiti is concerned, so can’t fault him for that.

    In fact, I think Penn is a fascinating for all the differing aspects of his character, his public personae, his private life, his public works, his acting, etc., etc. He’d be a good subject for a documentary in a few years, one that examines all those aspects, not one that kisses up to him. I’m interested in the pyschology or whatever of the public vs. private parts of some people’s characters and the discussion over how much does it matter if someone is a jackass in private life but a real force of good in public. it’s just so bizarre. that type of conflict always makes for good stories. I think that’s why penn is so compelling actually, why people talk about him.
    EDIT: actually now that I think of it, the same could be said of Wyclef? Maybe deep down, he’s a good person, means well, but in public, he’s just a…dummy, but does it matter? hm…

  24. mrut says:

    Spicoli is right on this one–Haiti needs a serious and committed policy-maker for president. As a goodwill ambassador, Wyclef Jean is where he belongs.

  25. thepickle says:

    Sean’s response was more thought-out and prudent than usual for him. I agree with what he said. I don’t think he is doing coke in Haiti, but definitely a lot of cigarettes and maybe some other kind of stimulants. He is one of those people who needs to feel he is saving the world, and who has energy for that without artificial stimulants? He is a great actor and he should be satisfied with that.

  26. Kiska says:

    I don’t care for either men personality wise. However, they should keep away from the politics and just keep doing humanitarian work. This bad talk is the equivalent to a dick measuring contest.

  27. bagladey says:

    I think Wyclef’s ugly, vengeful public “messages” to Sean Penn and Pras show exactly why it’s a damn good thing that he was not eligible for president: How do you day “dictator” in French?

  28. DetRiotgirl says:

    Ugh, neither of these men should be in charge of anything. But, as much as I hate to say this, I’ll take team Penn in this one. I can’t believe Wyclef dissed Pras like that! What a baby!

  29. Amy says:

    And this guy wanted to be president of a country? What an orator!

  30. Kelly says:

    I don’t find anything ‘fascinating’ about Sean Penn, either as a person or as an ‘actor’ (I use that description loosely).

  31. Lady LaLa says:

    Clef famously called his partner in the Fugees (Praz) a “Crackhead” after they
    split. Papa-Baby-Doc-Clef? The Haitians
    call him Wy-Theft for SOME reason, hmmm.

  32. Jen D says:

    When I re-read Penn’s comments, I was actually surprised at how generous and well-said they were. I’m NOT a fan of him, and I think he can be terribly self-righteous, but he had some great points. None of which I think Jean really responded to.

    That being said, I don’t know Jean’s politics or much about politics in Haiti. For all I know he would have made a great president.

  33. GreenGinger says:

    @d, I agree with everything you said about Sean Penn. I would certainly be interested in watching an even-handed documentary on him.

    I had a tremendous amount of respect for Wyclef before I read the Gawker expose on Wyclef’s charity. I’ve tried very hard to give him the benefit of the doubt, but every time he opens his mouth, he keeps sounding like a bigger entitled douche. Thank goodness he was not allowed to run for President of Haiti. If he had such a hard time managing a charity, how could he possibly expect to run a country with Haiti’s massive problems? I’m so over him.

  34. OhCamille! says:

    The people of Haiti deserve a real public servant…as do we all

  35. Jo 'Mama' Besser says:

    Just hanging out at my sister’s place this soggy, cold Labour Day, not doing much. She was channel surfing and came across an old VH1 series called something like The Best 100 Hip-Hop Songs. I don’t know how old it is, but who should pop up almost immediately but Wyclef? The only line uttered by him was ‘At this point, I’m at the level of a young Quincy Jones’. Yeah, okay. I was in her kitchen when this was happening, but she still knew to turn the channel. This is why I love my big sister, she’s always protecting me from crap! It’s a Labour Day miracle!

    I’m sure that there is a forgotten orchestral score at the bottom of Q’s second-best sock drawer that would absolutely vapourize this pretender to the throne: Deluded to an almost supernatural degree from day one, this swamp-donkey.

    Was ‘swamp-donkey’ harsh? I mean, I know that politicians aren’t familiar with people calling them names or not agreeing with every aspect of their policies. I’m sure he was flustered at the time too, having to respond to comments made about his choice to run. Talking is hard. He’s on a negative campaign for an election for which he’ll never be qualified. I mean, he thinks that having visited the country in the 30 years since leaving is as good as having lived there! Ghandi, Dr. King, Care Bears, help me, I want to hit him so hard!! His responses are on the level of the proverbial ‘oh yeah?’ What did THAT accomplish. Ugh, my medications.

  36. Holly says:

    Don’t worry Wyclef! You and all your friends are exactly the same! You think because you’re famous, you’ve written a few songs or starred in a few movies, it makes you the appointed on all things political. Perhaps you should speak to your friend who was rumored to be running for gov. of New Orleans. You guys can smoke a bowl and congratulate each other on your outstanding, unbelievable awesomeness!

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