'Do The White Thing' Is A Hilarious Take On Spike Lee's Classic Film

This isn't the same Brooklyn Spike Lee showed us 26 years ago.

The Brooklyn depicted in Spike Lee's 1989 film, "Do The Right Thing," isn't the same today. The borough has undergone major changes largely due to gentrification and Friday on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!," host Jimmy Kimmel aired a parody clip titled, "Do The White Thing," that gave viewers a chance to see what the film would have looked like if it had been filmed in 2015.

Kimmel's take on the iconic film shows a slightly exaggerated version of present-day Brooklyn where "I heart kale" is written in chalk on a sidewalk and people are looked down upon if their clothes aren't from a thrift store.

Mookie, the iconic film's young black male protagonist who combats racial tensions in Brooklyn, is replaced with a white man concerned with conserving the environment and consuming organic food. "Do The White Thing" shows Mookie and friends protesting Sal's pizzeria not for having no photos of black people on the walls like in the film but for having less than eco-friendly practices.

"I make the pies my way," Sal, the pizzeria's owner says in the video. "No tofu. No duck pancetta. No quinoa."

"You gotta at least go gluten-free,” Mookie urges Sal.

Unlike the original film, of course, no violence erupts because Mookie and friends are too busy sorting Sal's trash and listening to a whitewashed version of Public Enemy's "Fight the Power."

Watch the full "Do The White Thing" parody above.

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