Tuesday, April 21, 2026 - Rapper, Kanye West has faced a wave of concert cancellations, postponements, and international travel bans following the March 2026 release of his twelfth studio album, BULLY.
While the rapper recently held a sold-out
"Homecoming" show for 70,000 fans at SoFi Stadium, the backlash
regarding his history of antisemitic remarks continues to grow.
Despite a highly publicized apology published in The Wall
Street Journal earlier this year, West may have complicated his path to
redemption by sharing a clip that features rhetoric echoing antisemitic
stereotypes.
The clip, reposted to West's Instagram Story, features music
executive Ray Daniels on the TFU Podcast. Daniels praised West’s ability to
sell out major venues despite pushback from what he described as "the
system."
During the segment, Daniels remarked, "Everybody that
tried to cancel him, all those guys that run Morgan Stanley, run this bank,
totally don't want your money, their kids were in the stadium...
They are a system that's against him." Critics have pointed out that
referencing a "system" run by specific banks often aligns with
harmful tropes regarding Jewish control of financial institutions.
This latest controversy comes as West’s international tour
plans fall apart. He was recently banned from entering the United Kingdom,
leading to the cancellation of his headline slot at the Wireless Festival.
Additionally, he postponed a scheduled June 11 performance
at Marseille's Stade Vélodrome after French authorities threatened a formal
ban. In a post on X, West wrote, "After much thought and consideration, it
is my sole decision to postpone my show in Marseille, France until further
notice. I know it takes time to understand the sincerity of my commitment to
make amends."
While West has attributed his past behavior to a
"four-month long, manic episode," stating, "I take full
responsibility for what’s mine," his decision to amplify rhetoric about
"the system" has led many to question the depth of his reform.
As French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez and Marseille
Mayor Benoît Payan have both publicly opposed his presence in their cities, the
Chicago artist's global "top of the globe" tour remains politically
and culturally jeopardized.

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