Streamer Kai Cenat Mad After Shannon Sharpe Goofs On His Slam Dunk Competition Appearance

Streamer Kai Cenat did not take too kindly to Shannon Sharpe making a joke about his height while the First Take panelist ripped on the NBA Slam Dunk Contest, which Cenat was a part of.

Of course, Cenat's participation was limited to sitting in a chair and getting jumped over by Celtics star Jaylen Brown.

He did his job by sitting in a chair while Jayson Tatum in a giant coat — not cartoonishly huge like Justin Bieber's, but still —  teed the ball up for him.

That dunk was so not-spectacular that it got a boo from the crowd in Indianapolis.

It was lame. Kai Cenat isn't particularly tall so when he's sitting in a chair, it's not exactly the biggest hurdle to clear. I think I could do it pretty easily if I got a good running start. Sure, there's no way I could then dunk, and I'd probably pull a hamstring in the process, but I'd probably clear Cenat.

Considering other competitors have jumped guys over seven feet like Shaq and UCF legend Tacko Fall, jumping an average-sized dude in a chair is nothing.

READ: SHANNON SHARPE SHARES BRAINDEAD TAKE ON MARRIAGE AND THE NBA

Sharpe said so much on First Take.

"The man's already three-foot tall," Sharpe said. "Put him in a chair now he's one(-foot)-five."

Cenat did not take this jab at his height well.

"Oh, f--k you Shannon!" Cenat screamed.

Cleary height is a sore spot for Cenat. Not everyone can be nature's perfect height of 5foot-9 (not too short, not too tall; it's just science). 

Still, Sharpe's jab was more about Brown's decision to get a short guy to sit in the chair than it was Cenat's height.

But fortunately, he didn't pick up on that because that reaction of his was absolutely hilarious.

As you could probably guess, Brown was nowhere near a Slam Dunk competition win. For the second straight year, that honor went to Mac McClung, he of the Osceola Magic.

No, you read that correctly; Osceola Magic.

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Matt is a University of Central Florida graduate and a long-suffering Philadelphia Flyers fan living in Orlando, Florida. He can usually be heard playing guitar, shoe-horning obscure quotes from The Simpsons into conversations, or giving dissertations to captive audiences on why Iron Maiden is the greatest band of all time.