logo
American Eagle responds to the controversy around its ad campaign with Sydney Sweeney: 'Great jeans look good on everyone'

American Eagle responds to the controversy around its ad campaign with Sydney Sweeney: 'Great jeans look good on everyone'

American Eagle wants you to know: it's about the jeans.
The retailer broke the silence on the controversy surrounding its "great jeans" ad campaign starring actor Sydney Sweeney.
"'Sydney Sweeney has Great Jeans' is and always was about the jeans," the company said Friday, in a statement on Instagram. "Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone."
The brand received both criticism and praise for its ad campaign, which features the 27-year-old star.
"Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color. My jeans are blue," Sweeney says in one spot.
The message — and Sweeney's blonde hair, blue eyes, and light skin — sparked a debate on social media over beauty standards, with some slamming the campaign as " regressive."
American Eagle
Some social media critics drew comparisons to the debunked theories of eugenics and the German Nazi movement.
"Eugenics propaganda does typically focus a lot on this idea of who has good genes and who has bad genes," said one TikToker who says she is pursuing a degree in history.
She added: "It's one thing to talk about good jeans with a J in advertising, but it's a whole other thing to say someone has 'great' genes with the G."
The backlash saw backlash of its own as well, with conservative commentators celebrating Sweeney's appearance and mocking"cancel culture run amok."
Elon Musk's Tesla even weighed in with a video of one of its quality control tests showing a denim-on-leather test at one of its facilities.
"Our seats robot also has great jeans," the Tesla account posted on X.
"Seatney," it added.
Marcus Collins, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Michigan, told the Associated Press that American Eagle might have avoided some of the backlash if it had made the "genes" wordplay with several models of different races.
With all the commotion over American Eagle's attempt at wordplay, it seems that wit — like beauty — is often in the eye of the beholder.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American Eagle Jumps Most Since 2000 After Trump Praises Sydney Sweeney Ad
American Eagle Jumps Most Since 2000 After Trump Praises Sydney Sweeney Ad

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

American Eagle Jumps Most Since 2000 After Trump Praises Sydney Sweeney Ad

American Eagle Outfitters Inc. shares jumped the most since 2000 on Monday after US President Donald Trump touted the company's ads — pushing the retailer's stock into meme stock territory. The shares spiked 24% on Monday after Trump said in a social media post that American Eagle's recent marketing blitz with actress Sydney Sweeney is the 'HOTTEST ad out there.' He said American Eagle jeans are 'flying off the shelves.'

So Far, Elon Musk's Revival of Vine Is Seriously Disappointing
So Far, Elon Musk's Revival of Vine Is Seriously Disappointing

Gizmodo

timean hour ago

  • Gizmodo

So Far, Elon Musk's Revival of Vine Is Seriously Disappointing

For quite some time now, Elon Musk has been promising to bring back Vine. Back in the day, the short-lived TikTok precursor allowed users to post dopey 6-second videos that looped and could be easily shared. However, as the Tesla billionaire's plans for the short-form video distributor come into view, it increasingly seems like he (as per usual) got us all excited for nothing. Vine, which was purchased by Twitter in 2012, has been officially dead for a little over half a decade now. After Twitter killed uploads of the app's videos in 2016, Vine's archive subsisted for another three years or so until 2019, when the platform pulled support for it. Since then, all that has survived is a nostalgia for those halcyon days when short-form video was novel and joy-inducing, instead of being a grim staple of our increasingly frenetic information landscape. Musk initially floated the idea of bringing the video-sharing app back in 2022, not long after he purchased Twitter. Since then, he has repeatedly teased the app's return, much to the delight of site users. Last April, Musk again touched on resurrecting Vine with one of his many X polls. 'Bring back Vine?' he asked. A vast majority of respondents voted 'yes.' In January, an X user tweeted at Musk, 'think it's time to bring it back.' And the Tesla CEO personally replied, 'We're looking into it.' However, as Vine's 'return' has approached, it seems increasingly clear that the app may not be exactly how you remember it. On Monday, Musk promised that the archive of old Vine videos would return in some form. However, it seems increasingly doubtful that the app will be an active service that users can use to make new videos. Instead, Musk has implied that Grok's new AI video generator, Imagine (which, Musk has bragged, can be used to create NSFW material), will act as a replacement. 'Grok Imagine is AI Vine!' Musk wrote, in an X post on Saturday. Little other information was shared, but it left onlookers with the sad suspicion that the new Vine won't resemble the fun-fueled video clips of yesteryear and will be more about repackaging the AI-generated porn slop that's taking over everyone's feeds uninvited. Is Musk saying that Grok Imagine is the new Vine? Or will a new version of Vine be launched by X, alongside the archive of old videos? It's all unclear at the moment. If the resurrection of Vine just ends up being Grok's AI video app, with Musk dubbing it a 'return' of Vine, then we will all have been taken for a ride, once again. Gizmodo reached out to X for more information. That said, it's not like anybody really needs Vine now. The app occupies a peculiar spot in American tech history, in that it predated many other short-form video services that have gone on to become ubiquitous by copying its business model (see: Reels and TikTok). Yet despite being a pioneer in the category of apps whose primary societal contribution has been the shrinking of our collective attention span, it seems to have found success just a little too early. After Twitter's acquisition of the app, it enjoyed a few good years before confronting a boom of those competitor apps that ultimately outpaced it.

Trump's love for American Eagle's 'good jeans' ad campaign sparks a fresh 24% rally in the stock: 'Go get 'em Sydney!'
Trump's love for American Eagle's 'good jeans' ad campaign sparks a fresh 24% rally in the stock: 'Go get 'em Sydney!'

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

Trump's love for American Eagle's 'good jeans' ad campaign sparks a fresh 24% rally in the stock: 'Go get 'em Sydney!'

The retail traders who sparked a meme-like rally in American Eagle stock after Sydney Sweeney became the face of a new ad campaign were joined by Donald Trump on Monday in praising the brand. The president's love for the " Sydney Sweeney has great jeans" campaign kicked off a fresh surge in the stock on Monday, with shares rising as much as 24%. The company's campaign featuring the famous actor sparked controversy online — some claimed that it promoted eugenics while others accused it of being overly sexual in nature — but Trump made it clear he's a big fan. "The jeans are 'flying off the shelves.' Go get 'em Sydney!" he wrote on Truth Social before calling out other companies for "woke" advertising. Trump cited examples of companies such as Jaguar and Bud Lite that created ad campaigns that were met with backlash from some consumers. "The market cap destruction has been unprecedented, with BILLIONS OF DOLLARS SO FOOLISHLY LOST," Trump wrote. It's the latest leg of a meme-like stock surge for American Eagle, which jumped last month after retail traders online piled in following the reveal of new ads featuring Sweeney. The stock ultimately lost some momentum following the late July rally, which also saw several other new meme stocks rise. Trump's post helped it make up some of the ground it lost since then. However, even after multiple surges, the fashion retailer is still down almost 23% year-to-date (YTD) after a difficult start to 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store