Lil Wayne Take Vows Of Never Performing at Super Bowl After Kendrick Lamar Snub
Lil Wayne, the icon who put New Orleans on hip-hopโs global map, had one dream left: to headline the Super Bowl halftime show in his hometown. But when the NFL handed that golden moment to Kendrick Lamar, it didnโt just sting โ it shattered him.
โThey stole that feeling.โ
That haunting five-word confession, delivered in a raw and revealing Rolling Stone interview, says everything about the heartbreak Wayne felt. This wasnโt just a missed gig. It was personal. It was the hometown stage. And for Wayne, it was perfectโฆ until it wasnโt.
When the Super Bowl Comes to Your Backyard
The 2025 Super Bowl at New Orleans’ Caesars Superdome broke records โ and hearts. Especially Lil Wayneโs.
Lil Wayne believed, perhaps naively, that the NFL was building up to his moment. He played along. Attended events. Smiled in places heโd normally avoid. โYou ainโt never seen me in them types of venues,โ he said. โI ainโt Drake. Iโm in the stuโ, smokinโ and recording.โ
Yet, when the confetti dropped, it was Kendrick Lamar โ not Lil Wayne โ center stage. He never watched the performance. Instead, he shot pool with Lil Twist. โEvery time I looked,โ he admitted, โit was nothing that made me want to go inside and see what was going on.โ
A Snub That Cut Deep
Wayne wasnโt just hurt โ he was blindsided. Leading up to the announcement, whispers suggested Wayne was the guy. The locals were hyped. The streets buzzed. Even Wayne dared to believe. Thenโฆ silence. Until the announcement dropped, Kendrick was the headliner. On Instagram Live, Wayne didnโt sugarcoat it. โThat hurt a lot,โ he confessed. โI blame myself for not being mentally prepared for a letdown.โ
He wasnโt angry at Kendrick. In fact, he reached out to wish him luck. Nor did he throw shots at Jay-Z, who oversees halftime show selections via Roc Nation. But Wayne was clear: “Iโll never do it. They stole that feeling. I donโt want it no more.”
Who Really Decides?
For those wondering who’s calling the shots โ itโs not the NFL. Or at least, not entirely. Since 2019, Roc Nation and Jay-Z have led the charge. Theyโve brought in big names, bold shows, and cultural statements. From Shakira and J.Lo to Rihanna and now Kendrick, each choice is carefully curated. Executive Producer Jesse Collins clarified: โWe love Lil Wayne. But Kendrick was the chosen artist this year.โ
Still, some feel legacy artists like Wayne are getting the short end of the stick. And in Wayneโs case? It felt like more than just industry politics.
Nicki Speaks, Jay-Z Shrugs
While Lil Wayne played it cool, Nicki Minaj did not. She called out Jay-Z directly, suggesting personal politics played a role. โHeโs been sidelining Wayne for years,โ she posted (then deleted). โYโall just donโt see it.โ
Wayne, ever the diplomat, shut it down. He told Rolling Stone heโs still cool with Hov. Still respects Lamar. But that doesnโt mean heโs okay.
โIโm just trying to put me back together.โ
Kendrickโs Moment: Epic or Overkill?
Letโs talk about that halftime show.
Kendrick Lamarโs set smashed viewership records. He delivered bars, fire visuals, and a headline-making moment โ performing Not Like Us, his now-iconic Drake diss track. The crowd? Hyped. The internet? Exploded. Cameos included Serena Williams and Samuel L. Jackson. Social media called it “unapologetically Kendrick.” But critics werenโt as kind. Some claimed it was too aggressive. Others labeled it โanti-American.โ
โKendrick went nuclear on a global stage โ and Wayne wasnโt even in the building.โ
The culture clash was clear. One artist made history. The other mourned what couldโve been.
A Legacy That Canโt Be Denied
Lil Wayne doesnโt need the Super Bowl to validate him. Heโs already a living legend. But still โ this one hurt. For someone who changed the sound of hip-hop, built an empire, and mentored a generation (hi, Drake and Nicki), the New Orleans Super Bowl couldโve been a full-circle victory lap. Instead, itโs a scar.
โIt broke me. I donโt want it no more.โ
The Final Word
There are some stages that arenโt about exposure โ theyโre about belonging. Lil Wayne didnโt lose a gig. He lost a dream. And in doing so, showed us a rare, vulnerable side of an artist we often see as untouchable. Heโs still touring. Still thriving. Still rapping circles around the competition. But heโs also human. And this snub? It left a mark.
โEven icons can feel invisible.โ
The NFL mightโve fumbled this one. And for Wayne โ and hip-hop โ it may always be the one that got away.
