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Subject: "Jemele Hill said it best:" Previous topic | Next topic
Damali
Member since Sep 12th 2002
35865 posts
Thu Aug-15-19 12:34 PM

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29. "Jemele Hill said it best:"
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https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/08/jay-z-helps-nfl-banish-colin-kaepernick/596146/

Yesterday the hip-hop mogul Jay-Z and National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell held a joint media session at the Roc Nation offices in New York to seal a once-implausible partnership that isn’t being received as positively as both parties probably hoped.

I assume neither Goodell nor Jay-Z expected to be on the defensive once the NFL announced that it would give Roc Nation, the music mogul’s entertainment company, significant power in choosing the performers for the league’s signature events—including the coveted Super Bowl halftime show. Jay-Z and Roc Nation will also help augment the NFL’s social-justice initiatives by developing content and spaces where players can speak about the issues that concern them.

This wasn’t just another routine example of Jay-Z living out a lyric he’d rapped nearly 15 years ago—“I’m not a businessman. I’m a business, man!” Instead, the rapper faced questions yesterday about why he chose to collaborate with the same league that he’d publicly criticized for its treatment of Colin Kaepernick, the quarterback who hasn’t had an NFL job since taking a knee during the national anthem three years ago to protest police brutality and racial injustice. This is the same Jay-Z who showed support for Kaepernick by wearing his jersey on Saturday Night Live. On his megahit song “Apeshit,” Jay-Z rapped this lyric: “Once I said no to the Super Bowl. You need me, I don’t need you. Every night we in the end zone. Tell the NFL we in stadiums too.”

Now he’s in business with the league.

Kaepernick’s girlfriend, Nessa Diab, wrote on Twitter that Kaepernick didn’t speak with Jay-Z before he brokered his deal with the NFL. Jay-Z said yesterday that he spoke to Kaepernick on Monday, but he wouldn’t divulge how their conversation went.

Jemele Hill: Kaepernick won. The NFL lost.

A source close to Kaepernick, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic, told me, “It was not a good conversation.”

But it was all smiles yesterday between Jay-Z and Goodell.

“We don’t want people to come in and necessarily agree with us; we want people to come in and tell us what we can do better,” Goodell said at the press conference. “I think that’s a core element of our relationship between the two organizations, and with Jay and I personally.”

The financial arrangements have not been made public. But whatever the numbers, the NFL’s new partnership with Jay-Z is a huge win for the league. Some of the biggest celebrities in the world have voiced their support of Kaepernick, saying they would boycott the NFL until Kaepernick is back in the league.

Now that the NFL has Jay-Z’s blessing, it’s conceivable that some of those entertainers who distanced themselves from the NFL might change their mind. Jay-Z has given the NFL exactly what it wanted: guilt-free access to black audiences, culture, entertainers, and influencers.

NFL officials must have been bothered by how much Kaepernick was discussed during Super Bowl week earlier this year. Not only did Goodell have to answer more questions about why Kaepernick still isn’t receiving any interest from NFL teams, but there had also been a number of reports that the league was having a hard time finding performers for its halftime show. Some stars, including Rihanna and Cardi B, reportedly turned down the opportunity to appear at the event show out of allegiance to Kaepernick. Other celebrities, such as the comedian Amy Schumer, publicly pressured the Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine to pull out of his performance. The Reverend Al Sharpton, the civil-rights leader, blasted the rapper Travis Scott, who performed with Levine. “You can’t fight against Jim Crow and then go sit in the back of the bus,” Sharpton told TMZ.

Ironically, one of the people who also advised Scott not to perform at the Super Bowl was Jay-Z. Yesterday the Roc Nation founder said he’d told Scott he shouldn’t perform at the Super Bowl because he would be playing “second fiddle” to Maroon 5. It had nothing to do with Kaepernick.

Clearly Jay-Z’s support of Kaepernick only went so far. Regardless, why would Jay-Z waste any of his enormous social and cultural capital on the NFL when he doesn’t need the league’s platform, money, resources, or validation?

I get that Jay-Z might see this as an opportunity for artists to connect with the NFL’s immense audience. He could also offer some incredible insight and direction to the league on the social-justice front, since he’s been actively engaged in such work for a long time. I also understand that, to become hip-hop’s first billionaire, Jay-Z didn’t always have the luxury of avoiding relationships and partnerships with people he disagreed with or disliked.

But in this case, Jay-Z isn’t getting enough out of the deal to justify the sacrifice of some of his credibility. This alliance plays right into the NFL’s hands, because the league seems determined to banish any memory of Kaepernick with its recent social-justice efforts—even though it’s likely that Jay-Z and the NFL wouldn’t even be entering into this arrangement if Kaepernick hadn’t taken a knee in 2016.

It’s easy to see why Kaepernick would be upset now. The partnership with Jay-Z is part of the NFL’s larger strategy to continue to absolve itself of what happened to the quarterback and throw enough money at social-justice causes so that the players will no longer feel the need to protest—or, at the very least, keep their opinions about racial injustice far away from the football field. Last year The New York Times obtained audio of the three-hour meeting that took place among owners, players, and executives in October 2017, during the pinnacle of the protest drama. The late Houston Texans owner Bob McNair told the players who were present at the meeting, “You fellas need to ask your compadres, ‘Fellas, stop that other business. Let’s go out and do something that really produces positive results, and we’ll help you.’”

By leaving Kaepernick completely out of the mix, Jay-Z is now complicit in helping the NFL execute its strategy. Now he is an accomplice in the league’s hypocrisy.

“I think that we forget that Colin’s whole thing was to bring attention to social injustice, correct?” Jay-Z said during the press conference. “So, in that case, this is a success; this is the next thing. ’Cause there’s two parts of protesting. You go outside and you protest, and then the company or the individual says, ‘I hear you. What do we do next?’ So, for me, it was like, action, actionable item, what are we going to do with it? Everyone heard and we hear what you’re saying, and everybody knows I agree with what you’re saying. So what are we going to do? So we should, millions of millions of people, and all we get stuck on Colin not having a job. I think we’re past kneeling. I think it’s time for action.”

It doesn’t matter whom the NFL partners with, or how much money it pours into social-justice causes. The league’s actions come off as disingenuous because Kaepernick remains unemployed as a result of a peaceful protest. How can the NFL be taken seriously as a social-justice champion when it blackballed a player who stood up for equality?

I don’t question Jay-Z’s commitment to social justice or his desire to empower African Americans. He has consistently used his platform to have critical conversations and bring awareness to the inequalities and injustices that black people regularly face. Jay-Z brilliantly put into perspective how the war on drugs disproportionately hurt blacks and Latinos. He executive-produced a riveting six-part documentary series on the slain teen Trayvon Martin that aired on BET last summer. He also produced a miniseries on Kalief Browder, who was falsely imprisoned at New York’s Rikers Island for three years, starting when he was 16 years old, for allegedly stealing a backpack. Browder died by suicide a year after he was released. Jay-Z’s foundation has funded countless initiatives related to education and professional development. He has also donated millions to so many causes that he is one of the most important humanitarians in the world.

I don’t believe Jay-Z is a sellout, because his track record proves otherwise. But it does seem like he’s being used as cover. Or, at best, a buffer. The league can point to its partnership with Jay-Z whenever anyone brings up the fact that several of its owners are Trump supporters. As Kaepernick’s best friend, the Carolina Panthers safety Eric Reid, pointed out on Twitter, the announcement of this partnership helped move the news cycle past last week’s controversy involving the Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.

The Miami wide receiver Kenny Stills criticized Ross for holding a fundraiser for Trump last week. Stills, who continued to kneel during the national anthem last season, called out Ross for hypocrisy. The Dolphins owner also serves as a co-founder of RISE (the Ross Initiative for Sports and Equality), whose mission is to create leadership programs and workshops to address racism, inequality, and prejudice—which Trump keeps making worse. As evidenced by Ross and the New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, NFL owners are quite comfortable playing Robin Hood in one world and Gordon Gekko in another.

Fortunately for Ross and other owners, Jay-Z gave the NFL what it wanted—a blank slate. Jay-Z is an iconic figure, and it would be a shame if this partnership changed how people think of him. But I have also learned this about the NFL: Football is the NFL’s primary business, but chess is the game it plays best.

  

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The RocNational Football deal [View all] , legsdiamond, Thu Aug-15-19 05:56 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
He left this off 4:44
Aug 15th 2019
1
Yeah. She got a point.
Aug 15th 2019
2
      True
Aug 15th 2019
4
           Oh, plenty of people on here question Kaps settlement agreement
Aug 15th 2019
15
           I should have known
Aug 15th 2019
18
           Kap's lawsuit was an employment dispute
Aug 15th 2019
27
Hov been about a dollar above all else. This aint new.
Aug 15th 2019
3
I don't really mind him taking an opportunity to do both.
Aug 15th 2019
5
what was the point of saying we're past kneeling?
Aug 15th 2019
6
Yes that was stupid.
Aug 15th 2019
8
how does change happen?
Aug 15th 2019
7
Like this
Aug 15th 2019
9
change happens in a myriad of ways.
Aug 15th 2019
10
The shondo this sent through my spirit, sir....
Aug 15th 2019
47
Change occurs from the inside out. It was (is) never gonna happen...
Aug 15th 2019
11
By changing your stance when they offer more change
Aug 15th 2019
12
      when did he use his name?
Aug 15th 2019
26
           I’m not going to say Jay hasn’t done good things
Aug 15th 2019
32
                this is crabs shi*...
Aug 15th 2019
38
                     Read Damali’s post
Aug 15th 2019
45
                          I did...
Aug 15th 2019
48
                               It’s a fact that Jay wore Kaps jersey
Aug 16th 2019
59
                                    help me figure out if I’m crazy...
Aug 16th 2019
62
                                         For me kneeling is enough if someone wants it to be enough
Aug 16th 2019
63
                                         what does that even mean?
Aug 17th 2019
79
                                              Why stand
Aug 17th 2019
81
                                         Kaep never said stop balling
Aug 16th 2019
65
I think there is a reason Cap is kind of silent.
Aug 15th 2019
13
A lot of folks side-eyed Kap for taking the settlement
Aug 15th 2019
14
kinda weird that folks look it sideways.
Aug 15th 2019
16
if the case went forward it would show the NFL’s collusion
Aug 15th 2019
20
Homie, the boycott is real.
Aug 15th 2019
22
Sorry but I don’t believe it to be more than a few folks
Aug 15th 2019
31
      you don't have to believe it for it to be true.
Aug 15th 2019
54
           It ain’t
Aug 15th 2019
55
                How do you define a boycott?
Aug 16th 2019
60
                Impact.
Aug 16th 2019
66
                     Would you consider BDS not a boycott for those participating?
Aug 17th 2019
70
                There are levels of NFL fans
Aug 24th 2019
137
Only the ignorant folks would do that.
Aug 23rd 2019
136
right...
Aug 15th 2019
19
It conflates the Players Coalition with Kap
Aug 15th 2019
17
I wonder how much Kap wants a job these days?
Aug 15th 2019
23
      RE: I wonder how much Kap wants a job these days?
Aug 15th 2019
24
      I thought it was social justice...
Aug 15th 2019
25
      What social justice action item will this address...?
Aug 15th 2019
40
      True
Aug 15th 2019
33
      gee i don't know. ask his IG account where he posts about training
Aug 15th 2019
53
I think we’ve moved past kneeling
Aug 15th 2019
21
Jay tap dancing is some bullshit.
Aug 15th 2019
28
i dont know that she did sis
Aug 17th 2019
68
seems our culture dont like or understand change from within
Aug 15th 2019
30
If you believe this is change from within... lmao
Aug 15th 2019
34
i believe none of us know wtf is going on behind the scenes
Aug 15th 2019
37
      so how do you know that change is happening from within?
Aug 20th 2019
127
So you saying during the Bus boycott some Black celebrity
Aug 15th 2019
35
It would be like the Olympic committee telling John Carlos and
Aug 15th 2019
41
      Exactly
Aug 15th 2019
42
      Breh
Aug 15th 2019
43
      BOOM
Aug 15th 2019
52
      Damn. Good call.
Aug 15th 2019
56
seems like you dont understand what real change is. n/m
Aug 16th 2019
61
Exactly how much money is the NFL gonna pony up
Aug 15th 2019
36
Less than the tax incentives they get from the stadium deals
Aug 16th 2019
64
      Have they actually released the details of how much $$$
Aug 19th 2019
94
To understand Jay-Z's move, please refer to the Barclays' Center
Aug 15th 2019
39
What black folks got displaced by Barclay's Center?
Aug 15th 2019
49
Check the graph in the link
Aug 15th 2019
51
See also - "Jay-Z Sold Out Brooklyn" -swipe -
Aug 19th 2019
90
Is he going to apologize to Travis Scott?
Aug 15th 2019
44
Artist are paid union scale to perform at the SB
Aug 15th 2019
46
I mean it was kind of shitty to do before Kap got a settlement and
Aug 15th 2019
50
Look at Nessa, Eric Reid, Yourrightscamp social media
Aug 16th 2019
57
jay-z could have gone with walmart, mcdonalds, popeyes
Aug 16th 2019
58
what, yall thought jay z was different?
Aug 16th 2019
67
bah.
Aug 17th 2019
69
Jigga man did some crab stuff and you’re mad at ... black people?
Aug 17th 2019
72
crazy, right?
Aug 17th 2019
74
I actually find this to be a really thought-provoking take
Aug 17th 2019
76
      If my aunts were men they’d be my uncles
Aug 17th 2019
77
           If the Jay Z deal solves climate change I’m all for it.
Aug 17th 2019
80
Wow that interview he did on the MFL channel tho
Aug 17th 2019
71
The long con Jay-Z Reportedly to Get Majority Ownership in NFL Team
Aug 17th 2019
73
no he won't.
Aug 17th 2019
75
His Nets shares were a conflict for the NBA
Aug 18th 2019
84
Dwindling NFL ?
Aug 18th 2019
85
Ice Cube owns an NFL team?
Aug 18th 2019
87
      I never said he did. I questioned the Black gangster rapper label.
Aug 18th 2019
88
Yeah. You have no idea what you are talking bohrr
Aug 18th 2019
89
True, majority owner is incorrect
Aug 18th 2019
86
Headline is wrong. The article says significant ownership, not majority
Aug 19th 2019
91
Late Pass already corrected in 86
Aug 19th 2019
95
Apparently he's gonna get 5% of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Aug 19th 2019
92
      Then he will hire Kap and we will love him again.
Aug 19th 2019
93
      So he is taking over David Tepper's shares...
Aug 19th 2019
97
           That’s a necessary step to getting your own team
Aug 19th 2019
111
Some ninja on BlackTwitter said:
Aug 17th 2019
78
LMAO
Aug 17th 2019
82
Haha
Aug 17th 2019
83
F**k Freddie Gibbs
Aug 19th 2019
96
He beat the rape case.
Aug 19th 2019
110
A woman said she DREAMED that he raped her, & they locked him up
Aug 19th 2019
117
Get that money Jay!
Aug 19th 2019
98
Because of this if it's true
Aug 19th 2019
99
      I got no problem with him doing Dupri that way because:
Aug 19th 2019
100
      Yeah that's terrible
Aug 19th 2019
103
           Nah. Competition is natural.
Aug 19th 2019
104
                It's beyond competition
Aug 19th 2019
106
                RE: It's beyond competition
Aug 19th 2019
107
                     You missing the big picture.
Aug 19th 2019
108
                Nah. That’s that Hollywood Shuffle
Aug 19th 2019
109
      Is Jermaine popping like that now?
Aug 19th 2019
101
      Yep
Aug 19th 2019
105
      That's JD's fault...who could've talked Jay out of it?
Aug 19th 2019
113
           fair point...
Aug 19th 2019
114
           Nah the problem is Jay Z told JD not to do something he did
Aug 19th 2019
116
                That's still JD's fault and maybe it was the timing?
Aug 19th 2019
121
                     That doesn't let Jay Z off the hook.
Aug 20th 2019
123
Jay called JD to discourage him from making a similar deal with the NFL
Aug 19th 2019
102
damn...
Aug 19th 2019
112
smh
Aug 19th 2019
115
      lmao.. the hero worship for Jay and Bey is crazy.
Aug 19th 2019
118
      lol off the charts
Aug 19th 2019
119
           You ain’t know Harriet was a minority owner of a plantation?
Aug 20th 2019
122
                lmao
Aug 20th 2019
124
                LOL
Aug 23rd 2019
134
      That clip was on-point den a muhfukka!
Aug 19th 2019
120
           Reading this thread reminded me of that.
Aug 20th 2019
125
fam im so fucking pissed at jay z over this.
Aug 20th 2019
126
fair point...
Aug 20th 2019
128
But shouldn't folks be tired of canceling black men?
Aug 20th 2019
129
      yeah these cancellations are getting stupid at this point.
Aug 20th 2019
130
      This is the typical response when it’s one of their favs
Aug 23rd 2019
132
"Civil rights movements need people to work from the inside." - Dyson
Aug 23rd 2019
131
This is the same dude that made 2nd album with R. Kelly AFTER the tapes....
Aug 23rd 2019
133
Hovteps? Oh shit... lol.
Aug 23rd 2019
135
No one knows the terms of the Jay deal
Aug 24th 2019
138

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