A million reasons why Lady Gaga is my hero

Toby Forage
The Rushing Hour Fashion
4 min readFeb 8, 2017

So what did you think of Lady Gaga’s half-time show at Superbowl LI? Personally, I thought it was magnificent.

Predictably I got some smart-arse comments on the post, a couple of laughs, but that’s OK. After all, we all have different tastes, and one of the many things Gaga encourages us to celebrate is our diversity. So laugh it up. I couldn’t care less.

Here’s what I posted.

“Anyone that thinks Lady Gaga’s half-time show wasn’t political has either got their head stuck up their arse, or simply doesn’t understand her genius.”

I wasn’t looking for likes or laughs, to be honest. My sentiment was largely in response to a tweet a old colleague of mine had shared on Twitter — presumably in its support — which suggested Gaga had no message in 2017, and that Beyonce’s less subtle effort of 2016 was braver and more meaningful.

I took issue with this. To me, Gaga’s performance packed with political rhetoric, and was flawless in its execution. Here’s why.

The opening

Atop the NRG Stadium, and backed by 300 drones that lit up and hovered miraculously to create the United States’ flag, Gaga sang excerpts from two of America’s most patriotic songs, starting with God Bless America before rolling seamlessly into This Land Is Your Land. She then quoted from the The Pledge Of Allegiance before theatrically diving into the packed arena. What’s so cool about that? Well, it’s no secret that America is more divided than ever right now. What brings Americans together more than anything? Usually patriotic tunes and a common love for the star-spangled banner, and a reminder that despite what some people might say, there is a lot to celebrate about the country. It just needs to be focused on a little

The first songs

After belting out a small segment of Poker Face — pausing after the first-line reference to Texas as a nod of respect to the Houston location — Gaga moved into her anthem for those on the peripheral, Born This Way. If that wasn’t a middle finger to all the bigots, racists, homophobes and so on that have crawled out of their holes to celebrate the more extreme messages being bandied about by Donald Trump and others, I don’t know what is.

No matter gay, straight, or bi
Lesbian, transgendered life
I’m on the right track baby
I was born to survive.

“No matter black, white or beige
Chola or orient made
I’m on the right track baby
I was born to be brave.

Magnificent.

From middle to end

After Telephone, which didn’t feature an appearance from Beyonce as some had predicted, Gaga went into positivity mode with Just Dance. “We’re here to make you feel good,” she said after that one. “You wanna feel good with us?”

Looks like the pundits who said she’d been warned off politics were also hopelessly mis-informed.

Million Reasons was the penultimate number, a song all about searching out the best in everything and of course featuring this superb line.

If you say something that you might even mean, it’s hard to even fathom which parts I should believe.

Fake news, anyone?

Now I can’t be sure that Gaga’s chosen closer, Bad Romance, was in any way a reference to Trump and his wife Melania’s relationship — I like to think it was — but by this point she was decked out in gridiron shoulder-pads, ready to do battle with any shit the world can throw at her, or any of her little monsters — the term she uses lovingly for her millions of fans.

I’m lucky enough to have seen Lady Gaga live, and I maintain it was one of the best shows I’ve ever witnessed. If you were to look at my musical tastes generally, she is not someone you’d expect me to pay money to see, but it’s her ability to bring social issues to the forefront without aggression or animosity that I admire most.

I remember that night in Sydney, before playing Gypsy, she delivered an impassioned speech to the many LGBTQ members of the audience, showering them with love and the belief that they matter. It was as touching a moment as I’ve ever seen at a musical performance, empowering in the extreme, and grown adults were crying by the time she finished. I wasn’t far off it myself, such was the impact of her words. She then massively uplifted us all with the joy of the song, which celebrates a world in union. If anything was missing from her Superbowl set, it was that track.

But I’m being picky now. My love for Gaga has only grown more as a result of her half-time heroics on Superbowl Sunday, and I’m more than happy to put my paws up and scream it from the rooftop of any stadium you want to place me on.

Gaga rules, end of story.

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Toby Forage
The Rushing Hour Fashion

Photographer, traveller, writer and founder of Foraggio Photographic. I also play drums with Cigars Of The Pharaoh.