The Atlantic

Kanye West’s Hypocrisy on Empathy and Celebrity

The rapper insisting that a photo of Whitney Houston’s bathroom be the cover art for Pusha T’s <em>Daytona </em>is a clear betrayal of his rhetoric about compassion.
Source: Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

At 1 a.m. on the Wednesday before the release of Pusha T’s Daytona, Kanye West called Pusha T and said he had a new album cover for him. Pusha and West, the record’s producer, had already settled on an image, but last-minute inspiration had struck, and West was insisting on an overhaul. Securing rights to the new art would cost $85,000, which West would pay. Pusha agreed.

The image is of in a 2006 tabloid under a headline about Houston’s “drug den.” Houston would die of accidental drowning in a bathtub six years later.

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