Celebs

Balenciaga Cuts Ties With Ye Two Weeks After Adidas Placed Their Yeezy Partnership “Under Review”

Ye appears to be on shaky ground as three of his high-end business relationships are no longer or nearly there. On Friday (October 21), the parent company of Balenciaga reportedly revealed the end of their partnership with the artist.

“Balenciaga has no longer any relationship nor any plans for future projects related to this artist,” parent company Kering toldWomen’s Wear Daily.

Kering did not elaborate on their decision. However, their decision is fresh on the heels of Ye opening their summer 2023 show in early October. Balenciaga’s artistic director Demna and Ye collaborated on the show that went viral for its mud pit runway set-up. It was just one of their latest joint projects following their Yeezy Gap Engineered by Balenciagaline released in February.

Adidas Places Partnership With Yeezy “Under Review”

The Balenciaga news also follows another partnership crumble involving Kanye West. On October 7, Adidas released a statement praising the Adidas Yeezy partnership as “one of the most successful collaborations in [their] industry’s history.”

Numbers aside, though, Adidas spoke on the importance of respect concerningcollaborations–seemingly insinuating a lack of such standards with Ye.

We also recognize that all successful partnerships are rooted in mutual respect and shared values. After repeated efforts to privately resolve the situation, we have taken the decision to place the partnership under review, Adidas’s statement said.

Despite the new partnership status, Adidas pledged to “continue to co-manage the current [Yeezy] product.” But Ye didn’t take too kindly to the shaky relationship–choosing to express his grievances online. He posted a CNBC tweet announcing Adidas’s decision and launched previously stated accusations against the company.

“F**K ADIDAS! I AM ADIDAS,” Ye wrote. “ADIDAS RAPED AND STOLE MY DESIGNS.”

Ye Severed Yeezy Partnership With Gap Inc. In September

Another three weeks before Adidas’s announcement, Ye cut ties with Gap. According toCNBC, the rapper’s lawyer Nicholas Gravante sent a letter to Gap sharing concerns in August.

Ye gave the retailer 30 days to “cure its breaches,”including distributing Yeezy products in its stores and launching YZY Gap stores. Nicholas said Gap took no action in the time frame set. Kanye and Gap CEO Mark Breitbard agreed that their agendas weren’t aligned.

“While we share a vision of bringing high-quality, trend-forward, utilitarian design to all people through unique omni experiences with Yeezy Gap, how we work together to deliver this vision is not aligned,” the CEO said in a company memo.

Nonetheless, Gap agreed to push out its remaining Yeezy products.

At the time of publication, Ye had not publicly responded to the Balenciaga news.

Amid his struggling business relationships, Ye is also in the hot seat for spewing anti-Semitic rhetoric and false claims about the manner of George Floyd’s death on a recent episode of the podcast Drink Champs.

Earlier this week, Roxie Washington, the mother of Floyd’s daughter, filed a $250 million lawsuit against Ye for “harassment, misappropriation, defamation, and infliction of emotional distress.”

While speaking on the podcast, Ye said Floyd’s death was caused by fentanyl–rather than convicted murderer Derek Chauvin cutting off Floyd’s air supply for eight minutes on video.

Kanye said, “they hit [George] with the fentanyl, if you look, the guys’s knee wasn’t even on his neck like that.”

Cassandra Santiago

Cassandra Santiago is a multimedia journalist, editor, and editorial strategist with over a decade of experience shaping conversations across arts, entertainment, culture, and global news. A graduate of the University of Iowa, she has built a cross-platform career spanning newspapers, magazines, radio, and digital media. She joined The Shade Room five years ago and currently serves as a Senior Editor, where she leads editorial direction, oversees exclusive coverage, and trains and edits a team of writers. Cassandra has played a key role in developing high-impact content and editorial strategies for an audience of more than 30 million, contributing to platform growth, engagement, and monetization across multiple channels. In addition to her leadership role, she remains a daily contributor, with her articles generating more than 41 million views since 2023. Beyond The Shade Room, Cassandra offers freelance social media strategy services, speaks on the influence and impact of Black media at public panels, and owns Did It For You, an event design company in the DC, Maryland, and Virginia area. She is Poynter Institute–certified and was named to the DMV’s 35 Under 35 list in 2024.

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