
Stanfield has caught some backlash recently for being present in a Clubhouse room where guest made antisemitic remarks.
LaKeith has stated that “Any kind of hate speech, I vehemently reject.”
I personally believe that he didn’t mean for this to happen and genuinely feel sorry that these comments were made. Check out his latest IG post:

Social media could definitely be very unhealthy in Media Traffic’s opinion and especially the negative blogs, we hope his time away is nothing but positive.
LaKeith Lee “Keith” Stanfield (born August 12, 1991) is an American actor and rapper. He made his feature film debut in Short Term 12 (2013), for which he was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award. In 2014, he co-starred in the horror film The Purge: Anarchy and in the Martin Luther King biopic Selma, as civil right activist Jimmie Lee Jackson. Stanfield appeared in the film Dope (2015). He played rapper Snoop Dogg in the biopic about the hip-hop group N.W.A, Straight Outta Compton (2015), and will appear in the upcoming Oliver Stone biopic Snowden (2015).
Stanfield was born in San Bernardino, California and grew up in Riverside and Victorville, California. He has said that he “grew up very poor in a fractured family that was dysfunctional on both sides”. He decided to become an actor when he was 14 years old, when he joined his high school’s drama club. He attended the John Casablancas Modeling and Career Center in Los Angeles, where he was signed by an agency manager and began to audition for commercials.
Stanfield’s first role was in the short film Short Term 12 (2009), which was filmmaker Destin Daniel Cretton’s thesis project at San Diego State University, and won the Jury Award for U.S. Short Filmmaking at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. A year later, he appeared in the short film Gimme Grace (2010), before he gave up acting for several years. He went on to work a number of different jobs—roof work, gardening, at AT&T, and at a legal marijuana factory—before he was contacted by Cretton to reappear in a feature-length adaptation of Short Term 12, his first feature film. For the duration of the film’s production, Stanfield practiced method acting, distancing himself from the other cast members like his character, Marcus. He was the only actor to appear in both the short and feature films. Per Empire.