Kanye says lost $2 bln over anti-Semitic rants
LOS ANGELES
Kanye West lost $2 billion in a single day, he said on Oct. 27, as business partners rushed to dump the rapper in the wake of a series of anti-Semitic outbursts.
The music and fashion mogul has seen lucrative commercial tie-ups shelved as companies including Adidas and Gap took fright at comments dubbed hate speech by activists.
“I lost 2 billion dollars in one day. And I’m still alive. This is love speech,” West, who is also known as Ye, wrote on Instagram in a post that had been liked over a million times.
“I still love you. God still loves you. The money is not who I am. The people is who I am,” the post said, naming Emanuel Ari, the CEO of entertainment company Endeavor, who had urged companies to sever ties with the rapper.
German sportswear giant Adidas said on Oct. 25 it was ending its partnership with West after his “unacceptable, hateful and dangerous” comments.
Adidas also said it would end production of the highly successful “Yeezy” line designed together with West and “stop all payments to Ye and his companies”.
The move is expected to lop around a quarter of a billion dollars off Adidas’s bottom line this year alone.
West, who is open about his struggles with bipolar disorder, has long been outspoken, having half-heartedly run for U.S. president in 2020 and then thrown his weight behind Donald Trump.
His willingness to go beyond the pale is a double-edged sword for business partners, who have benefited from his high profile and his frequent media appearances, but who risk being tarnished by association.
While they weathered previous comments, including when West called slavery a “choice,” things began to unravel this month with his appearance at a Paris fashion show wearing a shirt emblazoned “White Lives Matter,” a slogan created as a backlash to the Black Lives Matter movement.
Days later he was temporarily locked out of Twitter and Instagram for threatening to “Go death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE,” using a misspelled reference to U.S. military readiness.
Adidas’s announcement was followed hours later by U.S. company Gap, which said it was taking “immediate steps to remove Yeezy Gap product from our stores” in addition to shutting down YeezyGap.com.
Paris-based fashion house Balenciaga also ended ties with the rapper last week, saying it “no longer [has] any relationship nor any plans for future projects related to this artist.”
One of Hollywood’s biggest talent agencies, CAA, said it was dropping West, while film and TV producer MRC said it was shelving an already-finished documentary about the artist.