Pastor Mike Todd Calls Druski’s Mega Church Skit A “Weapon of Mass Distraction”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JUNE 21: Druski attends the Fanatics Fest NYC 2025 at Javits Center on June 21, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by John Nacion/Getty Images for Fanatics)

Comedian Druski’s viral sketch “Mega Church Pastors LOVE Money,” a two-minute satire, has received mixed reactions worldwide, now including Pastor Mike Todd.

In the clip, Druski plays an over-the-top pastor who descends from the ceiling, blesses luxury fashion as divine symbolism, and urges aggressive donations for vague church projects. The jokes hit quickly, but the message cut deeper. The video has cleared 91 million views, making it one of the year’s most shared comedy moments.

The skit struck a nerve because it echoed familiar critiques of prosperity gospel culture. Druski’s line, “Christian Dior because I’m a Christian,” and his exaggerated fundraising appeals mirrored long-standing concerns about wealth, spectacle, and pressure placed on congregants.

Many viewers praised the sketch as sharp social commentary packaged as humor. Others viewed it as uncomfortable, arguing it exposed real tensions around money and faith.

As the clip spread, online speculation followed. Social media users began connecting Druski’s parody to high-profile pastors, with Transformation Church leader Mike Todd frequently named.

Pastor Mike Todd Responds To Druski’s “Mega Church Loves Money” Skit

Commenters pointed to Todd’s animated preaching style, viral sermon moments, and strong online presence. Druski never mentioned Todd, but the similarities fueled debate.

On January 18, Todd addressed the viral moment during a sermon in Tulsa. He acknowledged watching the clip and called it “hilarious,” even noting he had been off social media that week.

His message soon turned reflective. Todd said the skit itself did not bother him. What concerned him was the online reaction.

He criticized the hours spent arguing, insulting, and debating the video. Todd described viral moments as “weapons of mass distraction,” warning they can pull focus from relationships, responsibilities, and spiritual growth. He urged his congregation to rise above digital noise.

Todd also rejected claims that the parody targeted him directly. He denied owning a Rolls-Royce and blamed AI-generated images and old clips for warped perceptions. His remarks highlighted how quickly narratives form online.

Reaction was swift. Supporters praised Todd’s restraint. Critics accused him of sidestepping the satire’s message.

Druski’s joke, meanwhile, continues to spark laughter, discomfort, and conversation far beyond comedy.


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