How Kanye is battling and embracing his bipolar disorder

The music icon is trying to "change the stigma of 'crazy.'" Will it work?

Kanye West.
(Image credit: Illustrated | aoldman/iStock, Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Kanye West has never been shy about letting everyone know exactly how he's feeling.

After an erratic and tiring six weeks of faux-introspective philosophical tweets, loudly declared support for the 45th president of the United States, and off-the-rails appearances on gossip TV shows, the lead-up to the Chicago-born artist's eighth studio album has finally come to a close with Friday's release of ye. Within the confines of that album's succinct seven-track, 23-minute running time, Kanye directly addresses his own mental state, even including album art depicting a common novelty shop shop phrase: "I hate being bipolar it's awesome."

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Evan Romano

Evan Romano is a culture writer and reporter living in Brooklyn. He has spent time with Rolling Stone and Esquire, and was previously an editor with Brooklyn Magazine, for whom he once sat in a Las Vegas diner drinking coffee with Hannibal Buress.