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You know what's really heartwarming? When the world's most powerful celebrities manage to keep things in perspective, and realize that their little quibbles and irritations are nothing compared to the struggles average people face. Of course, that's not to suggest the famous are immune from real traumas, like when a fashion magazine comes to your house, takes pictures, and then slightly misdescribes one of those pictures in a caption.

It seems Kanye West is not happy that Harper's Bazaar thought a painting on his dining room ceiling, which features a winged black man, was a likeness of him:

...it bothered me greatly because people think I'm so so so cocky that I would have something like that. I'm sure it was an inside joke to everyone from the magazine in my home that day. People would come over my house after that and say, " I heard about this pic of you as an angel!" I would have appreciated if Harper's Bazaar would have put in some type of blurb to clear it up. I wanted people to see my home because I spent 2 years gutting it and was proud. I'm just a regular guy with cool stuff in his crib but instead I was made out to be Ben Stiller's character in the movie 'Dodgeball' with the huge pic of himself wrestling a bull in his office. Why didn't they write that my house had no pics of me, no plaques or awards, just art.

Cocky? Kanye? Perish the thought. But perhaps this is something Kanye can bring up in the anger management classes that he'll be attending in the near future?