Kanye apologises to Jay-Z – then issues disgusting tweet about Beyonce

One step forward and several steps back.

Kanye West apologised to Jay-Z for attacking his kids — but then immediately asked a vulgar question about his wife, Beyoncé.

“I’m sorry Jay Z,” West, 47, posted on X (formerly known as Twitter) Thursday.

“I be feeling bad about my tweet but I still feel I gave my life to this industry and thought so many people were my family but when I needed family on some real s – t none of these rap n — as had my back.”

Less than an hour later, the rapper returned to the platform to ask, “Do Beyoncé ever let Jay get p***y I mean like at least a couple times.”

One commenter pointed out, “U jus said sorry to him lmaoooo,” while another echoed, “You just apologised for the previous stunts, don’t pull a new one!! Lmaoo.”

Last month, West publicly questioned Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s 7-year-old twins’ mental capacity.

Though he initially deleted the unprovoked post, he re-uploaded it and clarified that he had not wiped the comments in order to be “a good person.”

Instead, the Yeezy founder explained, “I need everyone to know that I took the post about Jay Z and Beyoncé’s family down … because there was a possibility of my Twitter being cancelled [sic].”

West — who concluded his follow-up message with another dig at Rumi and Sir’s intelligence — did not reference the couple’s eldest child, 13-year-old daughter Blue Ivy.

The next day, he insisted, “I LOVE JAY Z AND I DO FEEL BAD.”

However, he doubled down on his initial sentiments in a subsequent interview with DJ Akademiks, saying he would rather “give up [his] life” than relinquish his “freedom to talk.”

West collaborated with fellow Grammy winner Jay-Z, 55, on their joint 2011 album, Watch the Throne, but the musicians have since fallen out as colleagues and friends.

The father of four — who has gone on various vile X rants in the last several months — was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2016 but claimed in 2022 that he was “mentally misdiagnosed.”

This story originally appeared on Page Six and is republished here with permission.