His wife says she’s fine, the outfits are her idea, and what looks like a circus from the outside feels to her like a two-person survival mission.

Bianca Censori has finally spoken, and she’s doing what so many partners of controversial men try to do: defend the person, downplay the damage, and still admit she’s been wrecked by it.

In a new magazine profile, she opens up about Kanye West’s antisemitic remarks, the sexual harassment and assault lawsuits against him, the speculation that he controls her clothes and body, and the mental-health cost of being married to a public meltdown in real time.

It’s raw, it’s complicated, and it walks that uneasy line between honest confession and very expensive image rehab.

The Moment

Censori, a 31-year-old architect who married West, 48, in 2022, breaks years of public silence to describe what living with his episodes has been like. She says supporting him through his manic stretches felt like nonstop emergency duty, describing the last year as being akin to performing CPR for months.

This year was a lot like doing CPR for months.

Questioned about the rapper's manic episodes, Bianca teared up as she said: 'All I can do is always just be there and help. This year was a lot like doing CPR for months'

She insists he isn’t antisemitic, even after his widely condemned comments about Jewish people and Nazism, and says he tends to fixate on extreme subjects. She recalls asking why he had become so obsessed, but says she never got an answer that truly made sense to her.

On the workplace lawsuits, Censori appears to partly echo his defense. Former employees have accused West in civil complaints of sexual harassment, assault, and creating a hostile environment on set. He has denied the allegations in court filings and moved to dismiss the cases. Censori suggests that making powerful art can be obscene and scarring and implies that some people only complained once they were no longer part of the team.

On the personal side, she pushes back hard on the narrative that West is forcing her into hyper-revealing, sometimes nearly naked public looks. She says she has an obvious obsession with nudity and that her outfits are a collaboration with her husband, not an order from him.

Bianca revealed: 'Me and my husband would work on my outfits together. So it was like a collaboration, it was never "I was being told to do something."'

Censori also admits she hit a breaking point. She describes going to rehab in Spain at West’s urging to work on what she calls emotional dysregulation. She says she had been self-medicating with benzodiazepines, exploding at loved ones, and blaming others for her happiness or unhappiness.

At the same time, West has launched his own very public mea culpa. He recently bought a full-page print ad titled To Those I Hurt in a major financial newspaper, apologizing for hateful statements and tying them to untreated bipolar disorder and an undiagnosed brain injury from a 2002 car crash. In a follow-up interview, he says his wife noticed him slipping into a deep depressive episode after a medication change, and that he then completed a stabilizing treatment program at a rehab facility in Switzerland.

The Take

Two stories are running in parallel here.

One: a woman clearly in love with her husband, taking his illness seriously, willing to drag herself to rehab and stand next to him while the world boos. On that level, it’s almost tender.

Two: a superstar with a long record of harmful public behavior, now framing that history through a mix of bipolar disorder, brain injury, and genius-level art, while his wife publicly leans in to that narrative and downplays the impact on people who say they were hurt.

Both can be emotionally true for them. That doesn’t mean the rest of us have to buy the package.

Censori’s own language is telling. Calling a year of emotional triage doing CPR for months is brutally honest; that’s what living with someone’s unmanaged illness and global scandals can feel like. But when she also suggests that people traumatized by a work environment are essentially fine until they’re no longer on payroll? That’s where empathy for a partner starts to look like minimizing the collateral damage.

West has every right to explain his diagnoses and his brain injury. Bipolar disorder is real, dangerous, and deeply misunderstood. None of that, however, magically erases antisemitic speech or alleged assaults. Context is not an eraser; it’s a complication.

What Censori seems to be doing is what many spouses of famous, volatile men do: offering herself up as character witness, caretaker, stylist, and now co-author of the redemption arc. She insists the nudity is her kink, not his control. She credits him for getting her into treatment. She softens his worst headlines with the language of art, process, and misunderstanding.

It’s the classic tortured-genius script just with more mesh bodysuits and a global audience dissecting every hemline. The risk, as always, is that in defending the man, you undercut the people he may have harmed, and you accidentally turn very real mental illness into a kind of aesthetic branding.

Being married to a five-alarm fire but insisting it’s just a different kind of candle might feel loyal. From the outside, it just looks like smoke inhalation.

Receipts

Confirmed

  • Bianca Censori, 31, an architect, married Kanye West (who now goes by Ye), 48, in 2022, according to publicly reported records.
  • In a recent long-form magazine interview, she described the past year with him as being like doing CPR for months and said she has deep love and empathy for him during his manic episodes.
  • She stated that she does not believe he is antisemitic, saying he tends to develop extreme fixations, and that she asked him about his focus on Jewish people and Nazism, but never got a fully satisfying explanation.
  • Censori said she has an obvious obsession with nudity and that her revealing outfits are a collaboration with West, not something she is forced to wear.
  • She revealed she went to a rehab facility in Spain to address emotional dysregulation, acknowledged self-medicating with benzodiazepines, and admitted she would sometimes explode at loved ones and blame others for her emotional state.
  • West recently published a full-page print advertisement titled To Those I Hurt, apologizing for hateful statements, linking them to bipolar disorder and an undiagnosed frontal-lobe injury from a 2002 car accident, and stating that neglecting that injury worsened his mental health.
  • In a follow-up interview, he said his wife noticed a deep depressive episode after a medication change, and that he underwent a stabilizing course correction in a rehab facility in Switzerland, emphasizing that bipolar disorder is a serious illness.

Reported / Alleged

  • Former employees, including a personal assistant and a model, have filed civil lawsuits accusing West of sexual harassment, sexual assault, and gender-motivated violence during work-related encounters, according to recent court filings. The allegations include claims of coerced sexual contact and physically aggressive behavior on set.
  • West has denied the allegations in legal responses and asked the courts to dismiss at least one suit, arguing that the plaintiff is attempting to punish or censor his creative process.
  • Censori, in her interview, appears to partially align with the idea that the intense nature of his creative environment may feel harmful to some and suggests that the discomfort described by former staff is connected to no longer being part of his team.
  • Public speculation that West controls Censori’s wardrobe and behavior has circulated for months; she explicitly denies this, saying the outfits are her choice and part of a shared creative process.

Backstory (For the Casual Reader)

If you haven t been tracking every twist of this saga, here’s the quick rewind. Bianca Censori is an Australian-born architect who worked with West’s fashion and design ventures before quietly marrying him in 2022, not long after his divorce from Kim Kardashian was finalized. She became instantly recognizable for wearing extremely revealing, often sheer or sculptural looks in public, sparking headlines and concern that he was using her body as performance art.

The architect, 31, wed Kanye, 48, in 2022 but she has remained silent in the wake of several scandals that have engulfed him

West, meanwhile, has been in the cultural penalty box for years. After a long, public history of erratic behavior, political outbursts, and oversharing about his family, he crossed a line for many with antisemitic remarks and symbolism that cost him major brand partnerships and enormous sums of money. He has previously spoken about having bipolar disorder, and the 2002 car crash that broke his jaw has become part of his origin story, now recast as involving a missed brain injury diagnosis.

The new wrinkle is this coordinated wave of confession: his printed apology and rehab revelation, and her first real interview about life behind the headlines. Taken together, they paint a picture of a couple trying to argue that what we’re seeing isn t a circus, but two damaged people clawing their way toward stability and calling the mess art along the way.

Where do you draw the line between supporting a partner through serious illness and unintentionally helping them dodge accountability for the harm they may have caused others?

Sources: Recent long-form magazine interview with Bianca Censori and Kanye West; full-page print advertisement authored by West in a major U.S. newspaper; publicly reported civil court filings by former employees in New York and other jurisdictions; and secondary reporting summarizing those materials dated February 6, 2026.


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