Drake’s Downward Spiral: How Losing to Kendrick Lamar Sent Him into a Tour of Desperation
It was supposed to be a celebration. The Grammys had just wrapped up, and Kendrick Lamar had walked away as the undisputed king of the night. “Not Like Us” wasn’t just a song anymore—it had become a cultural moment, a victory lap, a city-wide parade for Compton’s finest. And as the confetti settled, the hip-hop world turned its eyes to the only person who had the most to lose from all of this: Drake.
Drake, the self-proclaimed ‘Certified Lover Boy’ and the once-undisputed commercial juggernaut of rap, had been silent. That silence, however, didn’t last long. Enter: The Anita Max Tour.
At first, it seemed like business as usual. Drake had a new tour to promote, new merch to push, and arenas to fill. But the deeper you looked, the more cracks began to show. The energy was off. The confidence? Shaky at best. The setlists? A bizarre mash-up of old hits and desperate attempts to prove he still had the game on lock. If Kendrick was basking in his triumph, Drake was stumbling through the wreckage, trying to convince everyone—maybe even himself—that he was unfazed.
But the fans noticed. The internet noticed. The hip-hop community noticed.
Memes flooded timelines, dissecting every awkward stage moment, every forced crowd interaction, and every lyric that now, post-Kendrick obliteration, rang hollow. The man who once dictated the culture now looked like he was chasing it, and worse, failing to keep up.
And let’s talk about that name—Anita Max? Really? What is that even supposed to mean? To some, it sounded like a rushed attempt at rebranding, like he was throwing words together to distract from the fact that Kendrick had taken his lunch, eaten it in front of him, and left him with the check.
The tour wasn’t just a response to losing—it was a meltdown in motion, a global spectacle of a man who had spent over a decade untouchable now grappling with irrelevance. Instead of regrouping, Drake doubled down. He didn’t come back swinging; he came back spiraling.
The biggest irony? He didn’t need to do any of this. If he had just taken the L gracefully, disappeared for a bit, and come back with something undeniable, he might have salvaged the situation. But no. He chose to fight a losing battle. And with each tour stop, each viral clip of him looking disoriented or overcompensating, he’s making one thing painfully clear:
Drake isn’t just losing. He’s lost.