Kanye West showed a porn film to Adidas executives during recent meeting
(Credits: Alamy)

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Kanye West showed a porn film to Adidas executives during recent meeting

Sources are reporting that Kanye West played porn for Adidas executives during a recent meeting. Shortly after being kicked off Instagram for anti-Semitic posts, the 45-year-old rapper is again in hot water.

Kanye posted a 30-minute video titled ‘LAST WEEK’ on his YouTube channel. Ten minutes in, the video shows West, now legally known as Ye, sitting with Adidas executives in a meeting room. The rapper can be seen holding his phone in front of the executives (whose faces are blurred) while the video plays. Eventually, one of the men asks, “Is this a porn movie?” to which Ye replies, “Yeah”.

“Jesus Christ,” someone else says.

Ye lets the video play out until one of the executives stops him, saying, “Come on, man. Come on.” The video arrived after Ye had his Instagram account restricted after using it to share anti-Semitic posts. On Saturday. October 8th, the account featured a series of posts about Supreme New York’s creative director Tremaine Emory, with whom Ye has been involved in an ongoing feud.

Meta later revealed that they had deleted content from Kanye West’s account for a policy violation. Speaking to the Independent, a Meta spokesperson wrote: “We may place restrictions on accounts that repeatedly break our rules, for example, we may temporarily restrict them from posting, commenting, or sending DMs,” they said.

The previous night, Ye had shared a tweet suggesting that he has plans to run for president in 2024. He shared a photo of a campaign hat with the year “2024” printed on the front. According to internet archive records, he also tweeted that he would soon go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE”. He later claimed that he couldn’t be “anti semitic because black people are actually Jew”.

The tweet was subsequently removed by Twitter and replaced with text stating that it had violated the site’s rules of engagement, linking back to its platform use guidelines.