Anonymous ID: 1e53ff April 22, 2018, 11:12 p.m. No.1153738   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1151077

>>1151104

Sorry

Thats not B............ its a Phoenix who fell from the skies

 

watch the whole album video...

https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jg5wkZ-dJXA

>some one wants to embed that for me plzz

 

that is not Bey is nt symbolizing Her either

 

>During the scene he crashes the car, coming across the film’s other primary character: the bird. The bird acts as Kanye’s love interest; she’s beautiful and graceful in her appearance, and has birdlike wings and clawlike jewellery. The bird is Kanye’s opposite, fragile and scared of the world she has found herself in. When the bird is watching the news at ’Ye’s house, he tells her not to trust the media: “First rule in this world, baby, don’t pay attention to anything you see in the news.” In an interview with MTV, he described writing this line with director, screenwriter and collaborator Hype Williams. “Every day on the news there’s some new bullshit about me or about everything going on,” he said, “Once you’re on this side of the camera you’re like, ‘Aw man, none of this stuff is actually real.’” Kanye is giving us a taste of the lifestyle he leads while telling the bird to ignore the negative side of his celebrity.

 

>The dinner party is all-white-themed, with the table and guests dressed up in their finest white clothing and the ballerina performers wearing black. The inspiration from this scene came from Vanessa Beecroft, an Italian artist and regular collaborator with Kanye, who later worked on his Yeezy Season shows. Her piece VB65 features a table of 20 African immigrants in suits eating chicken and drinking water without platters or silverware, in a scene parodying the last supper. Projecting this on to Kanye’s piece, the guests at the table are all black, while the entertainment and servants are white, with Kanye at the centre of the table. Kanye is attempting to shine a light on the contradiction of black wealth (seen later in his work with “New Slaves”: “You see it’s broke na racism, that’s that ‘Don’t touch anything in the store’ / And this rich na racism, that’s that ‘Come in, please buy more”).

 

http:// www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/33888/1/revisiting-kanyes-runaway-and-its-resonance-today