This year has been full of the most eventful Kanye West moments, and another popped up on the Alo Mind Full Podcast this week.
Co-host Danny Harris began about a book he read numerous times and said he told West about the book, referring to him as “Ye.” Harris said the entire meaning of the book was, “If you believe you can, then you can. And if you believe you can’t, then you can’t.”
“Ye was telling that he hasn’t read this book, but I was telling him that every positive attribute he naturally embodies, and that’s extraordinary, you know, to have that confidence, you know, from being such a young kid and going out there and inspiring and having this vision and actualizing it is extraordinary,” Harris said to West.
West responded, “Also when you said I hadn’t read this book, I actually haven’t read any book. Reading is like Brussels sprouts for me, and talking is like getting the Giorgio Baldi corn ravioli.”
He then justified his response by bringing up the Howe & Howe Technologies senior vice president Michael “Mike” Howe and how he allegedly only reads the first and last sentence of long paragraphs and still became the person, alongside his brother Geoffrey Howe, to invent the “fastest track vehicle.”
Kanye West is the same man who owns Donda Academy, which not many people know about because, according to a recent Rolling Stone report, two sources told the outlet that parents were told to sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA).
And, per Rolling Stone, the principal of Donda Academy, Brianne Campbell, doesn’t have professional teaching experience demonstrating she qualifies to run the school. Campbell’s closest teaching experience was when she ran her own music lesson business, where she taught children piano, guitar, and singing from the comfort of her apartment.