The Jerusalem Post

Kanye West’s antisemiti­sm follows him to LA festival

- • By AUGUST BROWN

LOS ANGELES – R.C. Hogue grew up with Kanye West’s music. The rapper was “a top-three artist for me and a big part of my upbringing,” said Hogue, a 30-year-old from Los Angeles. Even after West supported Donald Trump, Hogue tried to “separate the art from the artist, because a lot of artists have done messed up things.” But he couldn’t forgive West for saying, in 2022, that he’d go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE” and praising Adolf Hitler.

Hogue was looking forward to this past weekend’s 10-year anniversar­y tour of the Rolling Loud hip-hop festival in Inglewood – until he saw West’s name, now just Ye, added to Thursday’s bill. So he was likely staying home, at least for the night West was performing.

“Time heals a lot of wounds, but with Kanye, it’s a little too soon to start listening to him again,” Hogue said. “He’s shown no remorse, no sign of admitting he’s wrong, and there’s no excuse for antisemiti­sm. It would feel weird to be there.”

West’s unexpected return to Rolling Loud – the biggest rap festival brand in the world – alongside his collaborat­or Ty Dolla Sign suggests the music industry may be tentativel­y welcoming him back.

Some rap fans see West as a roguish outlaw who beat cancel culture. Local Jewish communitie­s worry that booking him adds a sense of impunity around hate speech. Experts wonder why an acclaimed and successful festival would risk booking an artist famous for both antisemiti­sm and ongoing struggles with mental health.

“A lot of music festivals will drop artists to protect their reputation,” Hogue said. “But Rolling Loud is doing the opposite.”

Representa­tives for Rolling Loud declined an interview request to discuss West’s booking. West’s new booking agent, Cara Lewis, did not respond to an interview request.

IN THE YEARS after West acknowledg­ed his bipolar disorder and grief following the death of his mother, fans and the industry tried to put his erratic behavior in the context of his mental health challenges. West’s music meant a lot to fans like Hogue, and they didn’t want to cast him out.

Yet in 2022, his shocking outbursts led to the dissolutio­n of his multibilli­on-dollar apparel deal with Adidas; he was banned from social media sites and dropped by his talent and booking agents, and left with no record label. West’s career – one of music’s most influentia­l and lucrative – seemed in shambles.

In December, at a small Las Vegas listening party, West falsely cited “60 million of us in America, 60 million Jews in the world,” and shouted “Jesus Christ, Hitler, Ye, third party, sponsor that!” In January, West wore a shirt from the Norwegian metal band Burzum, whose founder Varg Vikernes was convicted of murder and inciting racial hatred.

Even with all this, some corners of the music industry may be ready to get back in business with him.

“I was surprised when I first heard that Kanye was headlining Rolling Loud because it seemed unnecessar­ily risky for the festival,” said Dave Brooks, Billboard’s senior director of live music and touring. “Ticket sales seemed to be doing well, and the risk that Kanye would say something offensive, have a meltdown or refuse to complete his performanc­e poses a real threat to Rolling Loud’s brand.”

But after a few other listening events went off without incident, “I think the decision makes more sense,” Brooks said. “Kanye and Ty have successful­ly completed five listening party events. The Rolling Loud guys are definitely using the performanc­e to drive ticket sales and are positionin­g themselves to look very smart if the show goes off without any major disruption­s.”

WEST’S PERFORMANC­E, booked as a collaborat­ion with Ty Dolla Sign under the aegis of ¥$, is still shrouded in mystery, but it will be his first live performanc­e in LA since his co-headlining set with Drake at a benefit show in 2021. He was booked to perform at Coachella in 2022, but dropped out weeks before showtime.

The duo’s new album, Vultures 1, topped the Billboard album charts for two weeks in February. It was West’s first album to spend multiple weeks atop the charts since 2011, and yielded the number-one single “Carnival.” The album is packed with guest stars like Travis Scott, Playboi Carti and Chris Brown (West has been teasing a Vultures 2 release soon).

If the controvers­ial rapper felt chastened by his recent blowback, it didn’t show on the album’s title track, where he alluded to his recent career immolation. “How am I antisemiti­c?” West raps on Vultures. “I just f***ed a Jewish bitch.”

Danya Ruttenberg, feminist rabbi and author of On Repentance and Repair, said she was “absolutely grossed out” when she first heard that lyric. “It’s as vile as any sexualizat­ion of a people.”

But she’s more worried that this weekend, tens of thousands of young rap fans will sing along, just a few miles from where a white supremacis­t group hung a banner in 2022 over freeway 405 saying “Kanye was right about the Jews.”

a“Anyone feeling validated by Kanye will feel more comfortabl­e perpetuati­ng literally medieval hate speech after this,” Ruttenberg said about his booking at Rolling Loud. “This performanc­e makes Jews less safe.”

The rabbi also noted the apology that West wrote on Instagram after his Las Vegas tirade – a mea culpa written in Hebrew: “I sincerely apologize to the Jewish community for any unintended outburst caused by my words or actions. It was not my intention to offend or demean, and I deeply regret any pain I may have caused.”

“Most American Jews don’t read Hebrew,” Ruttenberg said. “The idea that we’re this other people with a mysterious other language, or that our real home is Israel, that we’re a global enterprise connected via language instead of citizens of this country, is all part of the same trope.”

GIVEN THE backdrop of the Gaza conflict, which has led to antisemiti­c and anti-Muslim hate crimes in the US, some worry about making an artist who has a history of bigoted statements seem acceptable – even edgy and alluring.

“Kanye has done horrific damage as far as contributi­ng to the never-ending tsunami of antisemiti­sm in this country,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Los Angeles-based Jewish human rights group. “The struggle is to keep bigotry out of the mainstream, and there’s nothing more mainstream than a concert with 100,000 people. Putting him front and center is a signal to others that maybe they can sign on, too.”

Cooper met with the TV personalit­y Nick Cannon in 2020 after he made antisemiti­c remarks, and said he was impressed by Cannon’s willingnes­s to examine his prejudice and apologize. West, however, has done little to change, the rabbi said.

“If someone wants to make amends, take them seriously,” Cooper said. “I’m not a censor of anything in the arts, but when people like Kanye have taken hate and made it cool, it projects hate into the mainstream of culture at exactly the worst time for our community.”

West has burned many bridges in music since 2016, when after a troubling rant onstage at a Sacramento concert, he was hospitaliz­ed for mental health reasons and canceled his tour. Most fans and industry figures sympathize­d with his mental health challenges and were ready to support him again, even as he later met Donald Trump in the White House.

ROLLING LOUD’S gamble that West can still draw crowds will be a test of his viability as a touring act. The fest-opening set will be open to the fest’s fans who already purchased passes to see Nicki Minaj, Post Malone and Future, with a limited number of single-day passes just for West and Ty Dolla Sign’s set.

“Many people – both fans and executives inside of the music industry – are struggling to make sense of Kanye’s return in light of all the antisemiti­c and terrible things he has said or written on social media,” Billboard’s Brooks said. “But there is clearly still a big market for Kanye and people willing to work with him. Some members of Kanye’s own inner circle are Jewish, and I assume that those individual­s aren’t just motivated by money, but care about him and want to help.”

That troubles Ruttenberg. “This fest’s organizers can count themselves as responsibl­e for giving him this platform,” she said. “It’s extremely unhelpful to say the least. This fest has basically said Jews, which include Jews of color, are not welcome. The other performers have some hard questions to contend with now.”

The Times reached out to several top artists at Rolling Loud, including Jewish rapper BLP Kosher and Nicki Minaj, who denied West clearance of a 2020 verse for use on Vultures 1, about sharing a bill with him. All declined to comment or did not respond.

One could draw some parallels to West’s frequent collaborat­or Travis Scott. After 2021’s Astroworld disaster, where 10 fans were crushed to death as Scott performed, he took a year off from performing and donated to affected families. He was not criminally charged, though many lawsuits remain. The Billboard-topping American star later returned to headlining stadiums and major festivals without incident.

Judging by comments on Rolling Loud’s social media, many fans seem excited – or at least neutral – about West’s comeback performanc­e, which will be a major event in hip-hop no matter what happens onstage. “As for the fans who support him, I assume they have either forgiven Kanye for his past comments,” Brooks said, “or they simply don’t care – or in some cases, sadly, agree with Kanye.”

Longtime fans like Hogue are mulling those hard questions too, as they decide whether or not to attend the hip-hop festival.

“Rolling Loud probably wanted to add value to their lineup and their number one priority is selling tickets, but it does make me raise an eyebrow,” he said. “If you have a platform like this, you do have some duty to be moral.”

(Los Angeles Times/TNS)

 ?? (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times/TNS) ?? KANYE WEST performs onstage during the ‘Vultures 1’ playback concert at the Rolling Loud California festival in Inglewood, California, last Thursday.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times/TNS) KANYE WEST performs onstage during the ‘Vultures 1’ playback concert at the Rolling Loud California festival in Inglewood, California, last Thursday.

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