The Guardian (USA)

Adidas to investigat­e claims Kanye West showed pornograph­y to staff

- Edward Helmore in New York

The sportswear giant Adidas is to launch an independen­t investigat­ion into allegation­s of misconduct made this week against the US rapper and fashion designer Kanye West, including that he showed pornograph­y to staff at company meetings.

The claims by unidentifi­ed staff at Yeezy and Adidas, which surfaced in a Rolling Stone article on Tuesday, included allegation­s that the musician, who has changed his name to Ye, showed an intimate picture of his exwife, Kim Kardashian, in job interviews, and that his “problemati­c behavior” was overlooked by Adidas management.

Staff allegation­s included in a letter to Adidas obtained by the outlet included claims that Adidas “turned their moral compass off” and failed to protect employees from “years of verbal abuse, vulgar tirades, and bullying attacks”.

Adidas said in a statement on Thursday that “it is currently not clear whether the accusation­s made in an anonymous letter are true” but that it took the claims “very seriously” and had “taken the decision to launch an independen­t investigat­ion of the matter immediatel­y to address the allegation­s”.

The sportswear brand initially said it would not “discuss private conversati­ons, details or events that lead to our decision to terminate the Adidas Yeezy partnershi­p” but it had “been and continue[d] to be actively engaged in conversati­ons with our employees about the events that led to our decision to end the partnershi­p”.

In one alleged 2017 incident, Ye yelled at a senior female member of the design team that a Yeezy sneaker was not up to standards. West reportedly looked down at his foot, and up at the employee, and said: “I want you to make me a shoe I can fuck.”

Analysts estimate that the Yeezy partnershi­p accounts for 7% of the group’s revenue. Adidas has said it believes losing Yeezy will halve its expected profits this year. It is not yet clear if Adidas will continue to sell the designs, which the company owns, without Yeezy’s logo, which it does not.

The decision to launch an inquiry comes after one of Adidas’ largest shareholde­rs, Union Investment, demanded clarity about the alleged incidents. Last month Adidas abandoned a licensing and design contract with Ye after he made antisemiti­c threats.

Janne Werning, head of ESG capital markets and stewardshi­p at Union Investment, which holds a 1% stake in Adidas, told the Financial Times: “Adidas needs to disclose when the management and the supervisor­y board was first informed about the internal allegation­s.”

 ?? ?? Staff at Yeezy and Adidas said management overlooked Ye’s ‘problemati­c behavior’. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP
Staff at Yeezy and Adidas said management overlooked Ye’s ‘problemati­c behavior’. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP

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