Activism / September 25, 2024

Macklemore Is a Seattle Sports Superfan. Now, He Is Also a Target.

The Seattle sports establishment loved the Grammy Award–winning rapper until he dared criticize the United States for funding Israeli war crimes.

Dave Zirin
Macklemore, wearing sunglasses and a jacket with a Palestinian flag, gestures at a crowd in a concert.

Macklemore performs onstage wearing a Palestinian flag during the ibis RockCorps France 2024 on May 29 in Paris, France.


(Kristy Sparow / Getty Images)

There’s a new Seattle sports tradition: During the seventh-inning stretch, the Mariners play Grammy Award–winning rapper Macklemore’s track “Can’t Hold Us.” The song and the artist mean more to Seattle than most outsiders understand. Macklemore, 41, born Ben Haggerty, is a Seattle native, and over the last dozen years has become as much a city institution as the Space Needle. Being a white rapper, with all the privilege that entails, he pays extra mind—and focuses his foundation work—on issues facing Black, brown, and other marginalized communities.

Macklemore is also an irrepressible hometown sports fan. In addition to his music, which rings out at every Seattle sports event, Macklemore shows up to rally crowds before and during games. He even gives Seattle baseball legend Ken Griffey Jr. cameos in his music videos. Macklemore also puts his money into the sports scene as a minority investor in both the National Hockey League’s Seattle Kraken and the men’s pro soccer club Seattle Sounders FC. New York City has Spike Lee; Los Angeles, Jack Nicholson; and Seattle sports teams, Macklemore.

But that could now go away. At a hip-hop festival titled “Palestine Will Live Forever,” held in Seattle’s Seward Park, Macklemore reiterated his solidarity with the Palestinian people and his opposition to Israel’s war on Gaza and the United States’ role in funding the genocide. Last spring, Macklemore released the blistering “free Palestine” track “Hind’s Hall,” titled after the building taken over by Columbia University protesters that was renamed in honor of Hind Rajab, a 6-year-old Palestinian girl whom Israeli forces killed alongside her family in Gaza. After debuting his new track “Hind’s Hall 2” at the festival, Macklemore seemed to respond to someone in the crowd and said, “Straight up, say it. I’m not going to stop you. Yeah, fuck America.”

Almost before the speakers were loaded onto the truck, the Sounders and Kraken released a joint statement that indicated they could be severing all connections with Macklemore. They wrote, “We believe that sports bring people together and unite us. We are aware of Macklemore’s increasingly divisive comments, and they do not reflect the values of our respective ownership groups, leagues, or organizations. We are currently evaluating our collective options on this matter.”

The Sounders and Kraken were backed up by the American Jewish Committee Seattle, whose regional director, Regina Sassoon Friedland, said, “I’m not really surprised by it, I’m disgusted by it. I do hope corporate entities like the Kraken and the Mariners will think their relationships and cut ties right away.”

In addition, festival organizers dropped Macklemore from a show in Las Vegas. It recalls what Ice T said a generation ago: “Freedom of speech… just watch what you say.”

In response to all of this, Macklemore released a statement in which he said: 

I wish I had been in a better place with my grief and anger. But the truth is I’m not OK. I haven’t been. The last 11.5 months of watching a genocide unfold in front of us has been excruciating on a spiritual, emotional, and human level. I have been in utter disbelief with how our government is showing up at this moment in history. I don’t think I’m alone. I see dismembered kids in Gaza being pulled out of rubble, murder[ed] by U.S. manufactured bombs. I see my own children in their lifeless bodies. I don’t think I’m alone.

We need to be clear (and the American Jewish Committee’s comments give the game away): If Macklemore had said “fuck America” in a musical or artistic context that did not involve Palestine, no one would have noticed or cared. I remember seeing Flava Flav stick an American flag down his pants and through his zipper. Today, he’s America’s Olympic sweetheart. An artist saying “fuck America” is not an uncommon occurrence in our popular culture, but defending Palestinians is. Doing so—no matter who you are or where you work or how many Grammys you possess—puts you at risk. It is not just Macklemore. Concertgoers caught on camera as well as concert organizers and supporters are being doxxed just for attending or staging the day-long show.

Macklemore has been open about the fact that before October 7, he knew relatively little about Israel and Palestine, but he started reading and talking to others, and the more he learned and the more bodies of dead children he saw on social media, the more he felt he had to do something. That has included recording “Hind’s Hall,” one of the most downloaded songs of 2024; speaking out against Israel’s attacks and the US’s sending arms to be used in a genocide; and defending student protesters. Now, he’s a target. Most artists have been silent on Palestine; defenders of the status quo insist on punishing the tiny minority who speak—to turn them into examples so no one else might dare point out that the US is funding and arming a genocide in plain sight.

Macklemore’s future in the Seattle sports world is in question. His absence would create a void extending beyond that arena. It would be a cleaving of the kind of community connectivity that Macklemore has strived for—sometimes deftly, sometimes clumsily—throughout his career. The sports community in Seattle—from fans to players, to coaches to even dissident franchise owners—needs to stand up and say that Macklemore will not be erased from a 21st-century Seattle sports scene he helped to forge. The first test will be Friday when the Mariners return from a road trip. Will “Can’t Hold Us” be played during the seventh-inning stretch? The answer to that question will speak volumes.

Support The Nation this Giving Tuesday


Today is #GivingTuesday, a global day of giving that typically kicks off the year-end fundraising season for organizations that depend on donor support to make ends meet and enable them to do their work—including
The Nation

To help us mobilize our community in this critical moment, an anonymous donor is matching every gift The Nation receives today, dollar-for-dollar, up to $25,000. That means that until midnight tonight, every gift will be doubled, and its impact will go twice as far. 

Right now, the free press is facing an uphill battle like we’ve never faced before. The incoming administration considers independent journalists “enemies of the people.” Attacks on free speech and freedom of the press, legal and physical attacks on journalists, and the ever-increasing power and spread of misinformation campaigns all threaten not just our ability to do our work, but our readers’ ability to find news, reporting, and analysis they can trust. 

If we hit our goal today, that’s $50,000 in total revenue to shore up our newsroom, power our investigative reporting and deep political analysis, and ensure that we’re ready to serve as a beacon of truth, civil resistance, and progressive power in the weeks and months to come.

From our abolitionist roots to our ongoing dedication to upholding the principles of democracy and freedom, The Nation has been speaking truth to power for 160 years. In the days ahead, our work will matter more than it ever has. To stand up against political authoritarianism, white supremacy, a court system overrun by far-right appointees, and the myriad other threats looming on the horizon, we’ll need communities that are informed, connected, fearless, and empowered with the truth. 

This outcome in November is one none of us hoped to see. But for more than a century and a half, The Nation has been preparing to meet it. We’re ready for the fight ahead, and now, we need you to stand with us. Join us by making a donation to The Nation today, while every dollar goes twice as far.

Onward, in gratitude and solidarity,

Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

Dave Zirin

Dave Zirin is the sports editor at The Nation. He is the author of 11 books on the politics of sports. He is also the coproducer and writer of the new documentary Behind the Shield: The Power and Politics of the NFL.

More from The Nation

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass receives the Olympic flag during the closing ceremonies of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in Saint-Denis on August 11, 2024.

Stopping Trump From Using the LA Olympics to Burnish His Strong-Man Image Stopping Trump From Using the LA Olympics to Burnish His Strong-Man Image

Activists, community leaders, and organizers are already teaming up to prevent LA28 from becoming an echo of the 1936 Nazi Olympics.

Jules Boykoff and Dave Zirin

A grinning Trump holds up the UFC belt. Tulsi Gabbard and Elon Musk stand in the crowd behind him, clapping.

Watching a Parallel Media Try to Make Trump the Big Sports Story Watching a Parallel Media Try to Make Trump the Big Sports Story

The president-elect did not dominate the world of sports this weekend, but Fox News and Internet tabloids are inventing new realities.

Dave Zirin

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Nick Bosa interrupts a teammate's interview by pointing to his MAGA hat on October 27, 2024.

What the Bosa/Kaepernick Double Standard Tells Us About the 2024 Elections What the Bosa/Kaepernick Double Standard Tells Us About the 2024 Elections

Nick Bosa and Colin Kaepernick both brought their politics onto the field, yet they experienced very different repercussions.

Dave Zirin

Incarcerated individuals participate in

The Prison Rodeo at the Heart of Legal Enslavement The Prison Rodeo at the Heart of Legal Enslavement

Angola prison workers make between 2 and 40 cents an hour. They also have a controversial outlet for recreation and to vend their wares at market rate: a rodeo.

Lauren Stroh

Fernando Valenzuela, in his old Dodgers jersey, throws the pitch in a baseball field.

Fernando Valenzuela’s Magical Life and Tragic Death Reminds Us That Immigration Is Beautiful Fernando Valenzuela’s Magical Life and Tragic Death Reminds Us That Immigration Is Beautiful

The Dodgers pitcher had a legendary rookie year in 1981 in which he helped defeat the Yankees in the World Series.

Obituary / Dave Zirin

Harrison Butker smiles and reaches his hand out to greet someone off camera.

Chiefs Placekicker Harrison Butker Goes Wide Right and Finds Political Power Chiefs Placekicker Harrison Butker Goes Wide Right and Finds Political Power

The Kansas City Chiefs kicker has started a far-right super PAC to encourage conservatives to vote for “traditional Christian values.” He is part of a terrifying political trend.

Dave Zirin