Kanye West’s latest album “WW3”—featuring a swastika on its cover—includes a track called “Bianca” where the rapper, 47, suggests his wife Bianca Censori, 30, has walked out on him. The lyrics paint a chaotic picture of their relationship, with West rapping: “My baby she ran away / But first she tried to get me committed.”
He later adds, “I’m tracking my bitch through an app / I’m tracking my bitch through the city,” before pleading for her return: “Bianca, I just want you to come back / Don’t know what I did to make you mad.”
The song also takes shots at Censori’s family and compares their dynamic to Sean “Diddy” Combs and Cassie Ventura’s abusive relationship—a reference that lands amid Combs’ ongoing sex trafficking case.
Reports of trouble in the marriage first surfaced in February after West launched swastika-printed merchandise and doubled down on antisemitic rhetoric. A source told The Post that Censori, who married West in December 2022 shortly after his divorce from Kim Kardashian was finalized, had reached her breaking point: “The swastika shirt was the last straw… She told him that’s not who she is.”
The couple’s relationship has been under scrutiny since West declared on X (formerly Twitter) that he has “dominion” over Censori, dismissing their critics as “dumb ass broke bitches.” Their controversial 2025 Grammys appearance—where Censori wore a sheer nude dress—further fueled backlash.
While West insists in his lyrics that Censori will return (“he’s saying that she’s just ‘mad at him,'” per the insider), sources claim she’s “completely done.” As the rapper awaits reconciliation, the disturbing track raises more questions about the state of their union—and West’s escalating provocations.
