
The entire stage? A PlayStation controller. Because this isn’t just entertainment—it’s a game.
Kendrick Lamar doesn’t just perform—he orchestrates movements. And at Super Bowl LIX, he didn’t just put on a show; he delivered a layered, calculated, and culture-shaking masterpiece that was both a personal statement and a social critique.
The entire stage? A PlayStation controller. Because this isn’t just entertainment—it’s a game. And who owns PlayStation? That’s right, Sony—a major player in the music industry, a subtle nod to the corporate powers at play. From the moment Samuel L. Jackson, serving as an Uncle Sam-type figure, declared “America’s greatest game,” it was clear Kendrick wasn’t just talking about football.
The Moves Were Strategic—Every Button Press Mattered
Lamar’s set was a chess match in the form of a halftime show, mapping out his journey, the industry’s power plays, and the way America tries to control its artists. He opened with GNX, standing on his car, rapping, “You would not get the picture if I had to sit you for hours in front of the loop.” Translation: if you don’t see the deeper message, you were never meant to.
The dancers? They weren’t just dancers. They were color-coded—different sets, different affiliations—yet they moved in sync, subtly calling out the ongoing struggles within the culture. As they “squabbled up,” it wasn’t just choreography. It was a staged war—one that’s been fought inside and outside of music for decades.
Then came HUMBLE. Lamar played by the rules, doing exactly what the industry expects from a Black artist. Sit down. Be humble. But was it compliance? Or a setup for the next move?
A Debut, A Warning, and A Shot at Drake
Then, Lamar pulled out Man at the Garden, a song seemingly making its debut during the performance. He was taking it back to the streets—back to the raw essence of hip-hop. But Uncle Sam wasn’t having it. He called out Kendrick’s move, sarcastically calling it the “old culture cheat code,” before deducting a life from him, as if gathering your people costs you in the game of America.
Then, things got real personal. Lamar pressed the X button—his first deliberate move. And if you paid attention, you saw exactly what was coming. He teased Not Like Us, but didn’t play it—yet. Instead, he hit the hotline bling dance mid-performance, a direct shot at Drake, letting everyone know: the chess pieces are in position.
SZA joined for Luther, singing about better days coming and refusing to give “nobodies” any sympathy—a message loud and clear to anyone trying to silence real voices in hip-hop. The triangle button brought All the Stars, symbolizing the missing stars from the American flag scene earlier in the show. The message? We are all the stars. The culture. The people watching.
Then Came The Moment: Not Like Us
Uncle Sam tried to cut him off—“That’s what America wants, nice and calm, don’t mess this up.” But Kendrick had already decided. He fired up the Not Like Us beat. He grinned into the camera and declared, “40 acres and a mule—this is bigger than the music.” A reference to the long-broken promise to freed slaves after the Civil War, making it clear that this isn’t just about rap beef—this is generational.
They tried to rig the game, but they can’t fake influence. And Kendrick Lamar? He just proved he’s not just an artist—he’s the game’s master strategist.
Final Take
This wasn’t just a halftime show. It was a blueprint, a statement, and a warning. Lamar showed the world exactly how he’s moving—and that every step is calculated. Whether or not you caught the layers, one thing is for sure: hip-hop’s biggest chess match is still in play.