Did Kanye West Purposefully Try To Get Out Of Adidas Deal? | YourTango
Adidas drops Kanye West after anti-Semitic comments
Adidas Ends Kanye West, Yeezy Partnership
Adidas says it will relaunch Kanye West's shoe designs without the Yeezy name
Adidas Says Kanye West 'Mishandled' $75 Million of Marketing Funds
Adidas CEO doubts that Kanye West really meant the antisemitic remarks that led Adidas to drop him | The Seattle Times
Adidas will continue to sell Kanye West's shoe designs without the Yeezy name | CNN Business
New Adidas CEO throws Yeezy in kitchen sink | Reuters
Unsold Yeezy shoes piling up in warehouses after Adidas split with Kanye West | The Times of Israel
Adidas and Kanye West Are Launching a New Athleisure Line
Adidas to Sell Yeezy Products Under New Name After Split With Kanye West – The Hollywood Reporter
adidas End Partnership With Ye and YEEZY Rumor | Hypebeast
Adidas CEO makes a bold statement about Kanye West - TheStreet
Adidas says it may write off remaining unsold Yeezy shoes after breakup with Ye | AP News
How Adidas Uncanceled Yeezy | GQ
The fate of Adidas' excess Yeezy stock, after splitting from Ye, aka Kanye West: rather than 'burn' it, CEO Bjørn Gulden plans to sell the sneakers and donate the proceeds to charity
First Look: Kanye West x Adidas Just Walked the Runway | SELF
adidas - YEEZY - adidas and Kanye West Make History with Transformative New Partnership adidas + KANYE WEST
Everything Kanye West Is Saying About Adidas Right Now | Complex
Kanye 'Ye' West Under Investigation by Adidas for Workplace Misconduct - TheWrap
Adidas's Yeezy Sales Are as Strong as Ever After Kanye West Controversy - WSJ
Adidas Terminates Partnership With Kanye West - Fashionista
Kanye West Announces June Release of Adidas Line: Watch His Speech from Germany
Adidas faces first annual loss in three decades after Kanye West split
Everything We Know About Ye and adidas' New Agreement - Sneaker Freaker
Adidas CEO: Kanye West didn't mean antisemitic remarks | Reuters
Adidas has $500 million worth of Kanye sneakers and no good options - The Washington Post