What started as an offhand post on social media has become something considerably more official. Flavor Flav, the 67-year-old rapper and co-founder of Public Enemy, proposed a multi-day celebration of female athletes to the Clark County commission in Las Vegas this week, and the body approved it without a single dissenting vote. The event, called SHE Weekend, is scheduled for July 16 through 19 and will include a parade and a concert.
The proposal had been in the works since February, when Flavor Flav first floated the idea publicly following the U.S. women’s hockey team’s gold medal victory at the 2026 Winter Olympics in northern Italy. His manager described the concept as having grown organically from a genuine desire to honor female athletes, rooted in nothing more complicated than a supportive post online. What followed was months of planning that culminated in a unanimous green light from county commissioners.
Why Las Vegas and why now
The timing and location were both deliberate. Las Vegas has positioned itself in recent years as a destination for major sporting events, and Flavor Flav made clear to the commission that he believed no city was better suited to give female athletes the kind of celebration they deserved. He framed the weekend not as a niche sports event but as a proper victory celebration for women who had earned recognition on the world stage.
The commission echoed that framing, describing SHE Weekend as both a tribute to elite female athletes and a broader call for lasting change in how women’s sports are supported and recognized. The language was pointed and intentional, signaling that the event was meant to carry cultural weight beyond a single weekend of festivities.
The backstory behind the push
Flavor Flav’s advocacy for women’s sports did not begin with this proposal. His involvement traces back to the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, where he showed up in the stands to cheer on the U.S. women’s water polo team and became an unlikely viral sensation in the process. Dressed in team gear and bringing the kind of energy that made him famous, he drew widespread attention to a sport that rarely receives it. Around that time, he formalized his commitment by signing a sponsorship agreement with the team, taking on the role of official supporter.
The SHE Weekend proposal grew more urgent after an incident involving the U.S. women’s hockey team earlier this year. The team had been invited to the White House following their gold medal win, but declined after comments from President Donald Trump suggested their invitation was more obligatory than celebratory. Flavor Flav responded by extending his own invitation to the team, signaling that he would create the recognition they had been denied elsewhere.
A girl dad with a platform
Flavor Flav, whose legal name is William Drayton Jr., has eight children, four of them daughters. He has spoken openly about how fatherhood shapes his perspective on women’s sports and his investment in seeing female athletes receive the same visibility and enthusiasm as their male counterparts. That personal connection runs through nearly everything he has said publicly on the subject and gives his advocacy a quality that feels less like celebrity positioning and more like conviction.
Whether SHE Weekend becomes a recurring fixture or a one-time milestone, its approval marks something real. A rapper with a clock around his neck walked into a county commission meeting with a proposal to honor female athletes, and the room said yes, unanimously, without hesitation. Sometimes that is how change looks.

