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Like if they know someone is a genius but not business smart, they take advantage of that. It’s going to go back to when people used to philosophise and talk about proportions and shape and colour and what we can do for the next generations, but right now it’s all about what people can do to make the most money and how they can not cut creatives in on any profit and use creatives against themselves in a way. That’s going to change after me and Kim’s lifetime. We’re bullied and controlled by organisations and money and you know the people with money are in power. Well, y’know, I’m sure I bully myself sometimes but taking away people being able to bully you because you’re a creative. What do you consider your greatest contribution to music and also your greatest contribution to creativity? Sam Hollis, 18, New Zealand Greatest contribution to creativity is taking away the bullying. It’s funny that so many people that are supposed to be so super educated love to pick the lowest hanging fruit of the concept, of like fame or celebrity, as a way to diminish or to take away the validation of what is being done up to this point and what will be done in the future. It’s easier for us to shun it than to really try to dig deeper and find out more about it. He’s evoking something from another place and this is unfamiliar this is alien to us. He’s not being what he was taught by current society, taught by this lifetime. They don’t understand that he’s not being the projected version of himself.
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Y’know, most people don’t understand who they are so people’s misunderstanding of me is a misunderstanding of themselves. I think there’s people who don’t want to embrace what it really is so they use their position of like class, or snobbery, or whatever comments they have, to just try to always down things and to not give it its just due, or just opportunity as a form of discrimination. It’s like the same people who can feel an earthquake coming on, or see a tsunami coming. Do you think anyone fully understands Kanye West? Do you think you’re very different to your public persona? Have you created that in some way? Lou Stoppard, editor of SHOWstudio Yeah, I do think there’s people who understand. There’s kind of an irony to that as you have such a big direct reach, but I got the sense that you really felt that you were not being listened to or not being understood. I’ve watched quite a few of your interviews recently and you’ve talked about this idea of not being heard. I think everyone has an opinion on you - I really noticed that when preparing for this interview. You’re one of the most famous men in the world.