
Fans have won a spokesman who is unlikely to have an anti-racial campaign for mixed sentiment in the Super Bowl.
In one of the coveted commercial spots of the Super Bowl, rapper Snoop Dogg appeared alongside football legend Tom Brady, giving reasons for hatred, the foundation aimed at fighting anti-Semitism. It has been promoted. The foundation is supported by Robert Kraft, the owner of the New England Patriots billionaire, and Brady used to perform.
In the ad, Snoop and Brady repeatedly humiliated each other before reading “The reason for hatred is so stupid that it sounds like it.”
Some online viewers were not impressed by the craft spokesman’s choice. Snoop Dogg pointed out that he played the role at President Donald Trump’s inauguration last month.

“This was the silliest commercial for the Super Bowl,” one user wrote to X.
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Snoop Dogg said “There’s nothing but love” for former President Donald Trump after his previous feud.
“Snoop Dogg lost his right to blame commercial hatred when he stole the money for Trump,” another user wrote.
Snoop previously expressed disgust to the artists who performed for the president when he was first elected in 2017, “roasted” the person who sang at Trump’s first inauguration, and Trump in a 2017 video He said he pretended to be a dressed clown like that.
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However, this time the California-born rapper has changed his song.
He defeated the backlash by performing with the Washington DC’s first codeball three days before Trump’s oath, and telling critics to “get your life right.”
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However, fans were not fascinated by the switch-up.
“Snoop Dogg is doing commercials about opposing hatred, but being the man who played for the enforcer of hatred is wild!!!” Another post on x reads.

“I’m not sure Snoop Dogg, who performs at Trump’s inauguration, is the best spokesman for Stand Up To Hate TBH,” another added.
Although the ads had fewer fans than critics, some provided audio support for the message.
“I scream to Tom Brady and Snoop Dogg for this message. Let us all stand up to all forms of hatred,” media character Emily Austin wrote about X.
The ads arriving as anti-Semitic have seen a global increase, but were intended to send a strong message at risky moments, Craft told USA Today in a recent interview.
“I don’t recognize a part of this country,” he said. “I don’t like where we are heading. I’m worried about our country right now.”
“In Germany, it all started with the Jews,” Kraft said. “Then (Nazis) chased everyone. What I say to some Americans is, ‘You’re the next thing,” Jews, Asians, LGBTQ+ communities.
His comments emerge against the background of the country shaking by discrimination debates – the new Trump administration has bolstered criticism of LGBTQ+ Americans, and the NFL has printed “end racism” message since 2021 in the Super Bowl End Zone has been deleted.
“Why am I doing a Super Bowl ad?” The craft continued. “I think the majority of America, who are good people, believe there’s nothing they can do, but what we need is non-Jewish people to stand up to this hatred.”