RACE

It’ll Take More Than Halftime Shows to Bring Me Back to the NFL

Almost every move they make reaffirms my decision to boycott the ‘Big Game.’

Marlon Weems
GEN
Published in
6 min readFeb 17, 2022

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The NFL’s “End Racism” slogan juxtaposed with the league’s culturally offensive Kansas City team nickname is one example of its performative activism. Photo credit: NFL

I stopped watching NFL football six or seven years ago. The one exception to my boycott is the Super Bowl. If we’re being honest, we have to admit the NFL’s signature clash is more an event than a game. My decision to watch is driven not by the teams but by the halftime entertainment.

The fact is that watching or not watching the Super Bowl isn’t solely my decision. If the league books a good enough performer, then the other occupants in my household exercise what amounts to an unspoken option to override my self-imposed NFL blackout, even though they have no intention of watching the entire game.

So when I read a few months back that Dr. Dre, Eminem, Mary J. Blige, Kendrick Lamar, 50 Cent, and Snoop Dogg would headline this season’s halftime show, I knew that someone in my family would exercise their option.

And don’t get me wrong — I enjoyed the show.

That said, my stomach dropped at the sight of Eminem, the only white performer, taking a knee (allegedly against the NFL’s wishes) to honor Colin Kaepernick while the icons of hip-hop abstained from joining him. To me, it felt…

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Marlon Weems
GEN
Writer for

Storyteller. I write about American culture and growing up Black in the South.