![]() If the odds have improved for Yeezy fans, however, it probably has less to do with supposed cancel culture than with the generous supply on offer. A few even thanked those who had “canceled” Ye for making it easier to cop a pair of Yeezys. “if I hit on all four, imma have to work four 24 hour shifts in a row smh.” Most sneakerheads seemed to view the drop as an apolitical return to business as usual, though some Ye fans clearly saw it as a kind of vindication for the embattled rap star and fashion mogul. Others worried how much it might cost them to win every raffle they entered: “I’m in four different draws for some Yeezys,” tweeted. On Twitter, some complained about losing the raffles that determine who gets the chance to buy a pair of Yeezys. As Adidas sold off some of the Yeezy shoes left over from its partnership with Ye, which ended last October, fans turned to social media for a familiar ritual of shared delight and disappointment. On Wednesday, for the first time in over seven months, sneakerheads put aside their love-hate relationship with Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, and resumed a love-hate relationship with his Yeezy sneaker brand-which is to say, loving to buy them and hating to miss out.
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