After launching Sunday Services, Kanye West seems to be doing a 360-degree backflip as one of his representatives claims that he's in the process of setting up an adult entertainment studio.
This comes after Kanye has put out some pretty outrageous ideas out there, including dismantling the traditional way of consuming music.
Kanye West Wants to Launch Adult Entertainment Studio
Speaking to TMZ, Kanye's representative revealed that the rapper wants to start his own pornography studio to be a part of the Yeezy brand.
Apparently, Kanye has been tossing around the idea to his peers, but recent developments reveal that he's "dead set" on doing it because his partners are already in "advanced talks" to get it up and running.
The outlet also revealed that the "Yeezy Porn" studio would be a part of a broader adult entertainment division.
To make the idea come to fruition, Kanye has been talking to Stormy Daniels' ex-husband, Mike Moz, to help mount the plan, making him the head of the new Yeezy department.
Moz is a veteran in the adult entertainment industry, having worked as a producer for more than a decade. Previously, he also had credits in casting and art direction.
The outlet also shared that Kanye's adult entertainment studio could launch as early as this summer.
Page Six noted that Kanye's latest venture seemed to be a stark contrast to his initial statement attributing porn to be the downfall of his marriage with ex-wife Kim Kardashian.
"Don't let Kris make you do Playboy like she made [Kylie] and Kim do," he said in a now-deleted Instagram post in 2022 addressing Victoria Villarroel, Kylie Jenner's former assistant. "Hollywood is a giant brothel Pornography destroyed my family I deal with the addiction instagram promotes it Not gonna let it happen to Northy and Chicago."
Kanye West Released 'Donda 2' on His Own Stem Player
In 2022, when Kanye released Donda 2, he only made it available on his own stem player and not on streaming services. (via Pitchfork)
"Donda 2 will only be available on my own platform, the Stem Player," he wrote at the time. "Not on Apple Amazon Spotify or YouTube. Today artists get just 12% of the money the industry makes. It's time to free music from this oppressive system. It's time to take control and build our own."
The idea led to poor sales and reviews of the album.
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