Kanye West svela il titolo del suo nuovo album su Twitter

Spread the love

Kanye West

Il rapper e produttore discografico Kanye West ha usato Twitter per svelare in anteprima assoluta il titolo del suo nuovo album, in uscita il 22 novembre.

Kanye West è sempre stato piuttosto riluttante nei confronti dei social network. La scorsa estate ha aperto un profilo sul social network ed ha scoperto la gioia di poter avere un contatto diretto con fan, ammiratori e sostenitori.

Il titolo del disco è My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, se non è il disco con il titolo più lungo e contorto di tutti i tempi, poco ci manca. Non vediamo l’ora di sentire le nuove canzoni del Re Mida del rap.

108.006 commenti su “Kanye West svela il titolo del suo nuovo album su Twitter”

  1. Hey there I am so delighted I found your website,
    I really found you by error, while I was looking on Aol for something else, Anyways I am here
    now and would just like to say many thanks for a tremendous post and a all round
    thrilling blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to go through it all at the moment but I have book-marked it and also
    added your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be
    back to read more, Please do keep up the excellent work.

    Rispondi
  2. Russell Crowe has argued that the rise of independent politicians are
    better representing the views of everyday Australians, unlike the two-party-dominated system in the United States. 

    The Oscar-winning actor made the claim in response to podcast host Joe Rogan  complaining that Americans
    were ‘completely trapped in the two-party
    system’.

    ‘We have the same sort of situation, but we have a very interesting thing that’s happening in Australia at the moment, which is the rise
    of independents,’ Crowe countered.

    ‘The main parties have to deal with the fact those independents have to
    bring a non-party-line series of points to the argument.

    ‘And it’s working well. It’s working for us. In that it’s making both of the main parties re-examine who they are and what they stand for.

    Rogan mused ‘we could use that here, for sure’, highlighting
    how US politics is completely dominated by the Democrat and Republican parties.

    There are other parties, including the Green, Libertarian, and
    Reform parties, but these receive vanishingly few votes in comparison.

    Independent candidates can also stand and have been known to perform well on occasion. 

    The Oscar-winning actor (pictured ) made the observation in response to
    podcast host Joe Rogan who complained that Americans were ‘completely trapped in the two-party system’

    Joe Rogan (pictured) is one of the most powerful media figures in the world 

    Civil rights opponent George Wallace ran a third-party campaign in the 1968 US election which saw him garner 10 million votes and take five southern states,
    while another disaffected Democrat, Strom Thurmond, in 1948 carried four southern states on a similarly racist platform but with only a million votes.

    The nephew of a president, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., was poised to get on the ballot in dozens of states as
    an independent candidate before he pulled out and backed Republican Donald
    Trump. 

    He has now been appointed Health secretary in Trump’s incoming cabinet. 

    Trump himself had previously belonged to the Reform Party.

    The former New York property developer had even considered running for president in the 2000 election under the banner of that movement – formed by former third-party presidential candidate Ross Perot, who won 19 per cent of the
    popular vote in 1992 but gained no electoral college votes.

    Perot was the most popular minority party candidate since former Republican president
    Teddy Roosevelt in 1912 ran as the Bull Moose Party candidate
    – carrying six states including California and coming second ahead of Republican William Taft.

    Australia has seen a rise in recent years of nominally independent politicians who have taken votes away from the two traditional parties of Labor
    and the Liberal-National coalition

    This situation is helped by a strong Green party who now
    have 12 senators and four members in the House of Representatives. 

    Zali Steggall (pictured) became the first ‘teal’ independent to achieve huge success when she ousted
    former prime minister Tony Abbott in his seat in Sydney’s northern beaches
    at the 2019 election

    Meanwhile, independent candidates who run on strong climate platforms but are fiscally
    conservative have been labelled ‘teal’ candidates.

    This is because they have combined their ‘green’ views on climate with the traditional ‘blue’ approach of the centre-right Liberal Party on economics.

    Zali Steggall became the first teal independent to achieve huge success when she ousted former prime minister Tony Abbott in his
    seat in Sydney’s northern beaches at the 2019 election.

    In similar fashion, Monique Ryan won the traditionally
    Liberal seat from former treasurer Josh Frydenberg at the
    2022 election. 

    She was one of seven teals elected, swelling the lower house crossbench to 16, with this tally including the four Greens,
    three conservative independents and progressives Andrew Wilkie and Helen Haines.

    Crowe’s three-hour conversation with Rogan, which was
    first aired in August, has recently resurfaced in teal social media adverts.

    They are being pushed by Melbourne philanthropist Simon Holmes à Court, who
    founded Climate 200, which has given campaign funding
    to some teal candidates.

    Not all the 12 independents elected in 2022 were teals, however. 

    Maverick independent Bob Katter has just celebrated 50
    years in parliament (pictured: being congratulated by prime minister Anthony Albanese)

    Dai Lee, a former state Liberal candidate, defeated former Labor frontbencher and former NSW Labor premier Kristina Keneally in the south-west Sydney seat of
    Fowler.

    And, of course, maverick Bob Katter who has just celebrated 50 years in parliament,
    spending 20 years as a Queensland state MP before serving
    the past three decades in federal parliament as the MP for the regional far north Queensland
    electorate of Kennedy. 

    Among his many mad-hat policies over the years include
    a bid to teach school kids how to fire rifles and a desire
    to build a missile shield across northern Australia.

    The House of Representatives crossbench grew to 17 in late
    2022 when Andrew Gee quit the Nationals in protest at its opposition to the Indigenous Voice
    to Parliament. 

    The Greens and independents make up 11 per cent of the 151-member lower
    house – the highest proportion of non major party MPs since Federation in 1901. 

    Joe Rogan

    Rispondi

Lascia un commento