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Jay-Z Addresses Target Boycott Controversy In Yankee Stadium Freestyle

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Jay-Z Addresses Target Boycott Controversy In Yankee Stadium Freestyle

Jay-Z uses his Yankee Stadium freestyle to directly address criticism of the Target boycott and defend his criminal justice reform work with the REFORM Alliance.

Jay-Z stood before 45,000 people at Yankee Stadium and decided to address the elephant in the room head-on, turning a celebration of his debut album, Reasonable Doubt, into something far more confrontational.

The freestyle that came early in the night wasn’t just bars over a beat.

It was a direct response to months of criticism about his partnership with Target, a retailer facing a massive boycott over its rollback of diversity initiatives.

The Target boycott started in early 2025 when Pastor Jamal Bryant called for a nationwide economic protest after the company scaled back its DEI programs.

The campaign hit hard, contributing to a $12 billion drop in Target’s market valuation, forcing a change in CEO, and eliminating over 1,000 jobs.

When Jay-Z announced an exclusive 30th anniversary edition of Reasonable Doubt through Target, activists and community leaders called him out for breaking ranks with the movement. He wasn’t having it.



“They say I sold out, yeah I did sell out, three nights, I sold Yankee Stadium the hell out. I’ma a Target, aim, don’t miss that target/Exclusive they only doing what Apple and Walmart did. You shopping at Amazon or you boycott. You posting on Instagram? That’s Meta boy, stop it. You know Google owns YouTube, you picking and choosing the Politickin’ as usual,” he delivered, calling out the hypocrisy of performative activism on social media.

The crowd understood what he was doing. He wasn’t defending a business decision. He was questioning whether people actually believed in what they claimed to stand for.

But the freestyle went deeper than just Target. Jay-Z pivoted to his criminal justice work, referencing the impact of the REFORM Alliance, the organization he co-founded with Meek Mill in 2019.

“I’m bringing folks home to their family Laws getting passed, with him. You could like it or not, we don’t do no ass kissing,” he said, speaking directly to the tangible results of his activism.

REFORM has passed 22 laws across 12 states, capped probation terms at one to two years in California through AB 1950, and freed thousands from the revolving door of the criminal justice system.

The performance wasn’t just nostalgia. It was Jay-Z reclaiming his narrative on his own terms, refusing to apologize for the complexity of being a billionaire activist operating in a system that demands purity it can’t deliver.

The night featured Beyoncé on vocals for “Can’t Knock the Hustle,” Blue Ivy on piano, and a surprise appearance from Nas.

The remaining shows at Yankee Stadium on July 11 and 12 will celebrate The Blueprint’s 25th anniversary, with additional dates scheduled for September 10 at Stade de France in Paris and October 23 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

The London show in September marks the international expansion of the tour celebrating three decades of one of Hip-Hop’s most consequential albums.

Nolan Strong

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