Dancer gets lifetime ban after incident in Super Bowl halftime show…

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A Sudanese-Palestinian flag was unfurled during Kendrick Lamar’s halftime act, earning a Super Bowl dancer a lifelong NFL suspension.

As usual, this year’s Super Bowl sparked stories, rumors, and viral interest. The Philadelphia Eagles defeated the Kansas City Chiefs, ending Travis Kelce and co.’s three-peat hopes.

After losing 35-38 to the Chiefs in February 2023, the Eagles won 40-22 on Sunday (February 9).

But no Super Bowl is complete without a spectacular halftime show, and Kendrick Lamar performed at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans this year.

Lamar attempted to bury Drake with a 13-minute performance that included 11 songs, a live duet with SZA, and cameos from Serena Williams, Samuel L. Jackson, and DJ Mustard.

The concert was full with eye-catching, provocative moments that people will discuss online in the days to come.

One surprise was when a man posing as a Kendrick back-up dancer tried to stop the event while waving a Sudanese-Palestinian flag.

The banner read “Gaza” and “Sudan” to symbolize the conflict between Sudan and Palestine.

The flag initially appeared as the ‘dancer’ stood on a prop car, which he jumped off and dashed around the field. Security tackled him and removed him from the stadium. Three days after the incident, Zul-Qarnain Nantambu was identified.

After his Super Bowl stunt, the NFL revealed that the disrupter had been banned from football matches for life.

 

The NFL told UPI, “We commend security for quickly detaining the individual who displayed the flag,” according to Yahoo. He was in the 400-person field cast. The object was hidden on the person and revealed late in the show.

“No one in production knew the individual’s intent. The individual will be banned from NFL stadiums and events forever.”

The man told NBC: “And I know it would invigorate their faith, seeing somebody supporting them and thinking about them on such a grand stage to bring awareness to that, to their struggles.

“Maybe we don’t have the military power to stop the war, but we can help those affected by these atrocities in these countries.”

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