Kim Kardashian Says Marriage to Kris Humphries Was Not Set Up; Wants To Marry Kanye West?
Kim Kardashian, 31, told Tatler magazine that she and Kris Humphries were simply not meant to be.
The couple split in Oct. 11 after 72 days of marriage. Humphries had signed a prenuptial agreement. However, the couple is still involved in a divorce battle, in which Humphries' lawyers want to prove that their marriage was a fraud.
But in the new issue of Talter magazine, Kim, who poses in a white wedding dress-inspired gown, said she did not set-up her marriage.
"I mean, that is just not the person I am. Who would honestly get married for ratings? It's not like the ratings had dropped and we needed a boost," she said in the November issue, according to Us Weekly. "Never mind other peoples' emotions -- who would mess with their own emotions in that way? And for me to do it and have it not work out was the most embarrassing thing. It was risking ruining my career."
For her next wedding -- where the groom may possibly be rapper Kanye West, 35 -- she wants it to take place in a more intimate setting.
"It had always been my dream to have a big wedding, and when people said that I'd made it over the top for the show, that was just me: I am over the top," Kim admitted. "But the next time, I want to do it on an island with just my friends and family and that's it."
Kim has been dating Kanye West for the past six months, but they have been friends for about a decade. She told the magazine, "I can't even think about being with anyone else than the man I'm with."
This isn't the first time, Kim has spoken about her future with Kanye West.
In an August issue of New York magazine, she explained that she connects with West on a deeper level since they share similar interests, such as fashion.
"It's cool, 'cause you can definitely get more in-depth with someone who actually knows what you're talking about ... So that's been a fun similarity we have. I think it's essential to have similarities. When this whole life is done, and it's just the two of us sitting somewhere when we're 80, you want to have things to talk about that you have in common. I think that's something maybe I didn't value as highly as a quality I cared about in someone."