Jay-Z used his Yankee Stadium freestyle to directly address criticism of the Target boycott and defend his criminal justice reform work with the Alliance for Reform.
Standing in front of 45,000 people at Yankee Stadium, Jay-Z decided to address the elephant in the room head-on, turning a celebration of his debut album “Reasonable Doubt” into something more confrontational.
Late night jams are more than just bar beats.
It was a direct response to months of criticism of his partnership with Target, a retailer that has faced massive boycotts over rollbacks on diversity initiatives.
The Target boycott began in early 2025, when Pastor Jamal Bryant called for nationwide economic protests after the company scaled back its DEI programs.
The campaign was devastating, knocking $12 billion off Target’s market value, forcing a CEO replacement and cutting more than 1,000 jobs.
When Jay-Z announced an exclusive 30th anniversary edition of “Reasonable Doubt” via Target, activists and community leaders accused him of going against the movement. He didn’t feel that way.
“They said I sold out, yes I did, three nights, I sold out Yankee Stadium. I’m Target, Target, don’t miss that Target/exclusive, they only do what Apple and Walmart do. Are you shopping on Amazon or boycotting. Are you posting on Instagram? That’s Meta boys, stop it. You know the media.
Everyone understood what he was doing. He’s not defending business decisions. He questions whether people actually believe what they claim to stand for.
But Freestyle goes deeper than Target. Turning to his criminal justice work, Jay-Z cited the impact of the Alliance for Reform, an organization he co-founded with Meek Mill in 2019.
“I’m going to take people home and have them join him in the passage of the law. Like it or not, we’re not going to kiss ass,” he said, speaking directly of the practical results of his actions.
REFORM has passed 22 laws in 12 states, limiting probation in California to one to two years through AB 1950, and freeing thousands of people from the criminal justice system’s revolving door.
The show is more than just nostalgia. Jay-Z is retelling his story on his own terms, refusing to apologize for the complexities of being a billionaire activist operating in a system that demands purity but cannot deliver it.
That night, Beyoncé sang on the song “Can’t Knock the Hustle,” Blue Ivy played piano, and Nas also made a surprise appearance.
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 the Stade de France in Paris and October 23 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.
September’s London show marks the international expansion of the tour, which celebrates the thirtieth anniversary of one of hip-hop’s most influential albums.

