Kanye West was busy this past weekend. On Friday, he dropped an untitled single — now known as “Champions” — to promote his surprise upcoming album Cruel Winter. No hard date has been set for the album release at this time, but it’ll probably be after his other upcoming album, Turbo Grafx 16, which he announced in February. With fans still in a tizzy about Cruel Winter, Kanye revealed on Twitter he’d be playing a surprise show at New York’s Webster Hall at 2 a.m. on Sunday night.

The result was beautiful, dark, twisted, and chaotic. The show was canceled after four thousand people showed up to a venue that can only hold 1,500 and everyone quietly went back to their lives. But you have to wonder how one man can have all that power and you have to remember that this is hardly the first time that it has been made clear to us all that Kanye is music’s biggest star.

The Birth Of Yeezus

The 2005 rescue of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina was famously mishandled by authorities from FEMA all the way up to president George W. Bush himself. During an NBC telethon to raise money for the Red Cross, a young Kanye appeared with Mike Myers to appeal to citizens for donations. Kanye broke from the script on live, nationwide television to deliver a heartfelt appeal which spoke truth to power in the face of systemic racism. Myers, still on script, interjected before Kanye buttoned the moment with a simple, straight forward admonishment:

“George Bush doesn’t care about black people.”

And thus, an iconoclast was born.



Every Album He Creates Is The Best Album Of All Time

So happy to be finished with the best album of all time pic.twitter.com/JBWa8OWvqw — KANYE WEST (@kanyewest) January 25, 2016

Long before Kanye was ready to drop The Life Of Pablo he was hard at work promoting the album on social media. One campaign saw him change the name of the album from Swish, to So Help Me God, and finally, Waves, while others had him engulfed in a flame war with Wiz Khalifa over Wiz’s use of the abbreviation kk. But probably the most effective way to get people talking about the new album, whatever he called it, was by taking a photo of the set list and announcing to the world that he was done with it and that it was the best album of all time. Nothing says star power like claiming the GOAT crown in the pre-release chatter and convincing people that you might have a shot at being right.

Kanye Is Everyone

Kanye ended a 2015 Miami show with an extended freestyle in which he got real with the audience and revealed that he was Walt Disney, Steve Jobs, Howard Hughes, Malcolm X, JFK, Henry Ford, Michelangelo, and Picasso because — spoiler alert — he is all of us. I don’t remember being most of those people (or you) but that may be why I never recorded an album as good as 808s and Heartbreak.



He Created An Algorithm

In 2016, an audio recording of Kanye ranting backstage before his Saturday Night Live performance hit the internet. In it, Kanye got mad that the stage director moved his lights and screwed with his set. As the rant goes on however, Kanye begins complaining about his old foil Taylor Swift, calling her a “Fake Ass,” mentioning his last six years of hardship before threatening to break the internet in retribution for this injustice and finally revealing his Arnim Zola-esq algorithm for why he is a genius:



“By 50 percent more influential than any other human being. Don’t f*ck with me. Don’t f*ck with me. Don’t f*ck with me. By 50 percent dead or alive, by 50 percent for the next 1,000 years. Stanley Kubrick, ‘Ye,”

When Kanye Described Our Future Sky

The album Yeezus was a dark, minimalist, rap noir response to the epic abundance of Kanye’s previous album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. During his press roll out for his latest opus, Kanye sat down with Zane Lowe to talk about what it means to be Kanye West in 2013 and let us all in on a little secret: Kanye is the No. 1 rock star on the planet. Zane offered no response or follow up questions to the statement as its truth and meaning were self-evident. Kanye then went on to explain our future sky and how it’s a lot like the internet.



When Kanye Made A Powerful Enemy

As you may have heard, in 2009, Kanye hijacked Taylor Swift’s video of the year speech to push for Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It).” As the audience boos, Kanye shrugs and repeats “Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time.” Celebrities tweeted their disdain for him and there were whispers of him having a breakdown. But he came back, harder than anyone imagined. His next album would be My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy with a meta critic rating of 94. Nine months later he dropped Watch The Throne which broke iTunes sales records.

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