In his latest attempt at a comeback, Kanye “Ye” West returned to the stage in Los Angeles with a spectacle designed to signal resilience, relevance and, perhaps, redemption. Instead, it has reignited a familiar question: who, exactly, is willing to stand beside him — and at what cost?
Friday’s sold-out SoFi Stadium performance, his second high-profile U.S. show in years after a Wednesday event at the same venue, which drew tens of thousands of eager fans, featured a parade of collaborators and high-profile supporters, including Travis Scott and CeeLo Green and a surprise appearance by Lauryn Hill. The night was positioned as a celebration of West’s catalog and influence, with guest turns meant to underscore the breadth of his musical alliances.
But the optics were impossible to separate from the context.
Hill joined West for a performance of his 2004 hit “All Falls Down,” which was inspired by her 2002 live track “Mystery of Iniquity” and segued from her “Doo Wop (That Thing)” performance into West’s 2021 track “Believe What I Say,” which samples “Doo Wop.”
Hill also performed “Lost Ones” and was joined by sons Zion Marley and YG Marley on “Heartbeat,” “Crisis” and “Praise Jah in the Moonlight.” She and West hugged as she left the stage after their first performance together, according to the Associated Press.
West previously compared his then-unreleased new album Bully to Hill’s acclaimed, Grammy-winning 1998 record The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.
The show comes in the wake of West’s widely condemned antisemitic rhetoric and the release of “Heil Hitler,” a track that drew fierce backlash for its explicit Nazi references and helped cement his estrangement from much of the industry. Though he has since attempted to walk back some of his statements, the fallout has lingered — shaping how every new appearance, collaboration and performance is received.
That tension was especially acute around Hill’s involvement.
Her surprise set was meant to evoke a sense of legacy and continuity. Instead, it quickly became a lightning rod online. Within hours, social media filled with criticism from users questioning why an artist of Hill’s stature would align herself, even briefly, with West given the surrounding controversy. For some, the moment felt less like a musical reunion than a tacit endorsement.
The presence of longtime collaborator Scott and Green, who are both featured on and performed their Bully tracks, added to the sense that, despite the backlash, a core circle of artists remains willing to share West’s stage.
The rapper’s 12-year-old daughter North West, whom he shares with ex-wife Kim Kardashian, also returned to the stage on Friday, after she performed alongside her dad at Wednesday’s show.
But Hill’s appearance, given her iconic status and more selective public profile, carried a different symbolic weight — and drew sharper scrutiny.
The episode underscores the fraught calculus of the elder West’s attempted return. His shows may still draw crowds, and his peers may still appear alongside him. But each co-sign now lands differently, refracted through the unresolved fallout of his antisemitic remarks and provocations.
In that sense, the loudest takeaway from the rapper’s return wasn’t the scale of the show or even the music. It was the guest list — and the controversy that came with it.
Hilary Lewis contributed to this report.





