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Kanye West Says He's $53 Million in Debt, Asks Mark Zuckerberg for Help

It wouldn't be a typical week in the Kanye West hype machine without some head-scratching moments.
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LOS ANGELES — It wouldn't be a typical week in the Kanye West hype machine without some head-scratching moments— this time around they included a Bill Cosby endorsement and a second Taylor Swift feud.

But on Saturday night, prior to releasing his eighth studio album and performing on "Saturday Night Live," the rapper disclosed perhaps his biggest shocker yet when he revealed that he was $53 million in debt.

The 38-year-old West made the claim on Twitter shortly before the highly-anticipated album premiered exclusively on Tidal and his website.

"I write this to you my brothers while still 53 million dollars in personal debt," he tweeted. "Please pray we overcome... This is my true heart."

The "Life of Pablo" album download, however, was taken down quickly Sunday after less than 12 hours online, with the rapper explaining that he'd given the exclusive stream to Tidal for another week before going on sale to other outlets — a sign that the multi-Grammy-winner was likely in dire straits.

After the "Life of Pablo" download link had disappeared, he wrote, "Please for all music lovers. Please subscribe to tidal!!! I decided not to sell my album for another week. Please subscribe to tidal."

Tidal, the Jay-Z backed streaming service, recently paid Rihanna an undisclosed fee for her latest album, "Anti," though the February release was bungled when someone inside her camp leaked it online. Samsung reportedly paid $25 million to be a part of the campaign.

West, who's married to reality TV star Kim Kardashian, has been putting tens of millions into his fashion label. According to Business Insider, his latest clothing line is selling high-end coats and jackets for as much as $3,000 to $4,000. The Kanye sweatpants alone cost $510.

In a 2015 interview with BET, the controversial rapper said he incurred $16 million in debt from his fashion business.

"I was trying to play a sport that's a billionaire sport. It's not a millionaire sport and I'm proud of the debt," he boasted.

West, on Sunday morning, asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to invest $1 billion in his ideas because he is "the greatest living artist and the greatest artist of all time."

In yet another strange twist in the Kanye-"Life of Pablo" saga, pharmaceutical exec Martin Shkreli claimed he had been scammed out of $15 million in an attempt to buy exclusive rights to West's new album.

"Someone named Daquan said he was Kanye's boy and I signed the deal to buy 'Pablo' and sent the Bitcoin. Call the police, this is b----t," he wrote.

Shkreli, who was recently arrested on securities fraud charges, told his Twitter followers on Sunday that he'd been in touch with Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto, who promised to get his money back.