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Sydney Sweeney's ‘good jeans' advert isn't racist – it sent stocks surging… could it spell end of woke commercials?

Sydney Sweeney's ‘good jeans' advert isn't racist – it sent stocks surging… could it spell end of woke commercials?

The Irish Sun28-07-2025
LEANING over the hood of a classic car, actress Sydney Sweeney smoulders for the cameras.
She turns around, leaving the lens to zoom in on her behind, which looks pert in a comfy-fitting pair of denims.
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Sydney Sweeney smoulders for the cameras
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Sydney oozes sex in comfy-fitting pair of denims
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Sydney's American Eagle ad netted the clothing company $400million in just one day as its stock soared
And the voiceover tell us: 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans', before the beauty drives off and the brand name American Eagle flashes on the screen.
Simple? Yes. Game-changing? Absolutely.
There is no doubt
Gone is the virtue signalling that underscores so much advertising today.
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Instead, this new campaign is selling exactly what it says on the tin.
Woke messaging, and woke backlash, be damned.
The results over the past few days since the ads first dropped have been monumental. With just a few saucy clips and some accompanying sexy shots plastered on billboards across the US, the jeans brand has reclaimed its Noughties' selling power.
Indeed, just 24 hours after launching the promos, American Eagle's stock price had surged by ten per cent, netting the clothing company $400million in just one day.
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It had also reminded us — definitively — that sex sells, and 'woke-vertising' is a thing of the past. In other words, woke is officially broke.
The brand's chief marketing officer Craig Brommers has called the campaign their own 'Super Bowl' — which they've timed to coincide with the back-to-school period over the next few months.
Hollywood bombshell unrecognizable as she transforms into boxer for new movie – can you guess who?
Lapping it up
He said: 'We really wanted to cut through in culture. It will signify to our audience that this is something different, unique, special and a big moment for us.'
Yet even with all its efforts — including a 20-storey high, 3D billboard in
As well as the massive spike in stock price, elevating it to a $2billion company, it has also drawn a line in the sand when it comes to woke advertising.
Granted, the ad did, unsurprisingly, get backlash from some snowflakes and corners of the internet.
According to
Taking to social media, she said that praising Sydney, in this context, makes for 'one of the loudest and most obvious racialised dog whistles we've seen and heard in a while'.
Focus on genetics
Another TikTok user likened the focus on genetics to '1930s Germany'.
Despite the vocal complaints, the proof is in the pudding and, as far as
After all, this campaign is unabashed and unapologetic in its pursuit, offering us a throwback to 'the good old days' when ads were innuendo-laden, often un-PC and selling sex at all costs.
It may not be particularly deep, but it's far more authentic than the performative social, political and cultural lecturing that has been clogging ad campaigns in recent years.
Meanwhile,
It is a niche the actress has been carving out over the past year, in addition to her soaring acting credits, and it's one that hinges on her undeniable sex appeal.
We really wanted to cut through in culture. It will signify to our audience that this is something different, unique, special and a big moment for us
Craig Brommers
Make no mistake: this isn't a sexual object who is being exploited for the cameras.
Sydney is smouldering, proving to consumers that she is in full control.
In another clip for the brand, the 27-year-old wriggles on the floor, filming herself with a hand-held camera.
Again, she is playfully selling sex and brands — and consumers — are lapping it up.
It's what makes her such hot property, enabling her to keep nabbing critically lauded roles, including her
Rather than being cheapened by that persona, though, Sydney's success is rocketing and she has a reputed net worth of $40million, plus she is making companies millions.
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Sydney tinkers under the car bonnet in jeans ad
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Sydney is smouldering, proving to consumers that she is in full control
According to brand expert Nick Ede, the genius is in Sydney's USP.
'She's a modern-day sex symbol,' he tells us. 'I think what's great about her is she owns herself and she owns the way she looks.
'She's a bit like Sabrina Carpenter. They both own their sexuality, and it's up to them what they push and what they don't push.'
The genius is, by knowingly owning her sexuality — and cashing in on it — Sydney is empowering herself, and empowering other women, too.
She is also putting her money where her mouth is, having struck a deal with
Surely that is far more worthy than any woke-tinged ad campaign could ever be?
She's a modern-day sex symbol. I think what's great about her is she owns herself and she owns the way she looks
Nick Ede
As Nick explains, Sydney knows full well what she is doing and she is in on the innuendo.
It is something she proved earlier this year, following her tongue-in-cheek partnership with soap brand Dr Squatch, which saw her release a range of soap made of her own bathwater.
Again, the messaging was overt, unapologetic, cheeky and displayed Sydney's greatest, ahem, assets, with a knowing wink to the camera — while playfully mocking the 'dirty little boys' who lusted after her.
It is also something the actress is well versed in after debuting as the hyper-sexualised character Cassie in Euphoria in 2019.
She has since learnt the art of capitalising on her sex appeal — last year wearing a T-shirt with a slogan that read: 'Sorry for having great tits and correct opinions'.
And judging by her ad campaigns' continued successes, she is clearly striking a chord with punters who have grown increasingly tired of the 'woke' ads all over social media and TV.
In the past year, Sydney has also struck million-dollar deals with
Seduce audience
The implication is that, with her old-school, sultry branding and her modern self-awareness, she is the ultimate saleswoman.
Let's remember, dating back to the
It reached its peak in the Eighties and Nineties when — whether you were selling dishwashing liquid, shampoo or chocolate — you were aiming to seduce your audience.
Just think of
Or who could forget the orgasmic-sounding commercial for
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Eva Herzigova stopped traffic with her infamous 'Hello Boys' billboard ads for Wonderbra in 1994
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The sultry Cadbury's Flake ads featured lingering shots of a woman in the bath as she seductively bit down on her chocolate bar
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Brooke Shields in the 1980 Calvin Klein campaign
The suggestive marketing didn't stop there.
Indeed, models such as
While fellow model
And we still blush at the thought of those very sultry ads for
Subtle, it was not. As for jeans, they've always sold something a little dirtier than denim.
Think of
Forty-five years later, the world of advertising is back to where it started, with an added level of playful awareness — but it had to take a few detours along the way.
In recent years a plethora of brands embraced the so-called 'woke-vertising' of the moment — a trend where a political or cultural lesson emerges as the centrepiece of a frivolous campaign.
The intention may have been worthy, but the outcome hasn't always had the positive effect intended, as Jaguar can attest to.
Last year, the car firm was mocked over an ad featuring models of different races and genders in bright colours — but no cars.
Critics slammed the brand for its 'woke corporate virtue signalling', claiming it had made a gross misstep in trying to stay relevant by over-pandering to PC culture and erasing its identity.
Likewise,
Then there was
Consumers were duly dumbfounded by the unsolicited lecture.
Amid the 'woke-vertising', it seems brands have lost sight of the point of ad campaigns — to sell a product, not lecture their audience.
American Eagle's success should force them to think again.
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Jaguar promo – without any cars – drove us mad
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They argued that corporations possessed some abstract ethical duty to turn their desire to make a profit into a progressive political argument. This particular constituency was never going to win the case. It's just too worthy, finger-waggy and po-faced. The movement – call it woke, call it social justice, whatever – spiralled into total decline by 2023. Their moralising decadence was revealed as not part of the grand arc of history, but instead a sociological blip. We know all of this to be true by now. So, I was full of admiration for the last remaining hangers-on as they came out in full force to condemn Sweeney and American Eagle, their howls of rage wrapped up in some illiterate rhetoric about late-stage capitalism. I think it is brave to come out swinging knowing that you lost the argument a long time ago. My version of the instinct is my continued, visceral defence of James Cameron's 2009 film Avatar . What were they so mad about? First, the obvious: don't sexualise women. 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I'm not on these guys sides' either, but at least they have a sense of fun. Of course everyone is quick to declare victory: 'Woke is dead in advertising' one Telegraph columnist declared, Telegraph - ically, on a podcast. 'The vibe shift, she lives' goes the chorus. This is the final nail in the coffin for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and all those painting-defacing lunatics. Finally, the inevitable cultural victory for the right is here, as it was always meant to be. So runs the argument, anyway. (I wonder if these people have also failed to observe the ambient politics of the year: DEI policies still exist pretty much everywhere; universities are still under the cosh of activist students; we are still entertaining discussions about whether Ireland needs a dedicated woman's museum.) So, I think they are wrong too. The most frustrating thing for the disenfranchised social-progressives of the 2010s is not that they lost the culture war to a huge Conservative Machine, typified now by Sweeney's genetic hegemony, but instead that they lost to something far more benign entirely: the centre. Because none of this episode is actually mainstream vindication for the worst political impulses of a Trump administration – trying to make that case is ludicrous. It's just a light social correction to the moral excesses of the past decade; a hand held out in the dark to say 'it's okay, you're allowed to have fun'; it is a victory for aesthetic liberation more than it has anything to do with politics. [ Sydney Sweeney is selling her bathwater. What has become of us? Opens in new window ] We should always return to the original text; look at the advert itself. Is the genes thing a bit right wing? Sure, whatever. But really this is Norman Rockwell's sentimental realism; Taylor Swift's 'screeching tires of true love'; Bruce Springsteen's stadia; hamburgers and milkshakes; corn silos in a flyover state; shanty towns in Appalachia; multi-lane highways; and clacking boardwalks of Coney Island. It's just Americana, in all of its cliches and superlatives. The company is literally called American Eagle, what did you expect it to do? In the great pendulum swing of politics, Sweeney in 2025 marks something: not a stake in the ground for Conservative values; but just a general and gentle loosening of cultural shibboleths. That really is a victory.

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