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A filmmaker in the eye of Ye's storm

Los Angeles Times

|

September 12, 2025

For six tumultuous years, Nico Ballesteros followed the rap star, capturing his rawest highs and lows and resulting in the doc 'In Whose Name?'

- BY JOSH ROTTENBERG

A filmmaker in the eye of Ye's storm

DIRECTOR Nico Ballesteros, 26, was just a teenager when he joined Kanye West's inner circle and began documenting his life.

The black SUV rolls toward the White House, carrying Kanye West to a meeting with President Trump that's already destined to become a media circus. In the backseat, wearing a red MAGA cap pulled low, West leans into his phone, words tumbling out in a torrent to Trump's son-in-law and advisor Jared Kushner.

"I need to go in the exact way that a foreign dignitary would go," he insists. "I'm not going to step outside and put my life in danger. I put my life in danger by wearing the hat and I need to be loved and respected as such. Because there could be someone out there that could be trying to take a shot at me. There's people who potentially want to kill me for wearing this hat. If I get killed for wearing the hat in front of the White House, you're not going to win any midterms."

Beside him sits Nico Ballesteros, a teenager from Orange County, camera in hand, worn down by months of near-constant filming and fighting to keep his eyes open.

To the public, the October 2018 White House visit was a surreal collision of politics and celebrity. West — who once blasted George W. Bush for not caring about Black people, and who now goes by Ye—delivered a rambling, live-streamed 10-minute monologue that veered from hydrogen-powered planes to "male energy" to his own bipolar disorder, one that was instantly lampooned on late-night TV, parsed on cable news and dissected across social media.

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