Kanye West's rep dismisses underpaid model claims
Kanye West's representative has fired back at accusations the models at his recent fashion show and album release party were not paid.
The rapper debuted his Yeezy Season 3 collection and staged a listening party for his new album, The Life of Pablo, at Madison Square Garden on Thursday (11Feb16) in time for New York Fashion Week. His wife Kim Kardashian and many of her family were in attendance, alongside celebrities including Gigi Hadid, Vogue editor Anna Wintour, and actresses Jaime King and Chloe Sevigny.
However, in a lengthy post on Instagram, a user known only by the
name of 'kur-ents' - who claims to have taken part in the show -
alleged many of the models were working for free, with some even
wearing clothes from retailer American Apparel, editors at TMZ.com
report.
"Kanye finnessed (sic) 1200 young black adults into working as
extras for free to a sold out white crowd that was screaming 'all
day n**ga'. We didn't find out we weren't getting paid til 6am. He
sent us to (New) Jersey and put us in Salvation Army clothes (not
Yeezy, my pants were Carhartt and my shirt was American Apparel),"
he wrote on Friday (12Feb16).
Kanye's camp has fired back at the claims, telling writers at
TMZ.com that all the models were fed, paid and dressed in the
rapper's fashion line for the show.
A source explained that because of the large number of participants
in the presentation, some were in vintage clothes that were dyed
and were paid a rate of $10 an hour.
Another model opened up about the guidelines models were given
before the show to gossip website Jezebel.com. It is alleged that
Kanye instructed the models not to smile, whisper, dance, sing,
make eye contact, "act cool", look at any cameras, or make the same
movements at the same time.
A representative for Kanye has yet to officially comment on the
reports. However, the rapper hinted he is unhappy with the
criticism of his presentation in a barrage of posts on Twitter.com
on Friday.
"I had an album listening and clothing presentation and Madison
Square Garden," he wrote. "...People were crying... people were
throwing up the fist... people were dancing... I’m a human being...
I’m an artist, bro (sic)... you have no idea what I’ve had to go
through... so many people didn’t make it and gave everything they
had for me to stand on their shoulders and break through fashion...
fashion ain’t no joke for me... It’s a way of life... creative
expression and industry... I’ve given everything I had for this
moment... a lot of people feel it’s the paradigm shift..."