Sydney Sweeney + American Eagle: Who Cares? cover art

Sydney Sweeney + American Eagle: Who Cares?

Sydney Sweeney + American Eagle: Who Cares?

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Key Points

  • American Eagle's ad featured Sydney Sweeney with a voiceover saying "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans," which some online interpreted as referring to genetics (G-E-N-E-S) rather than jeans, potentially having racial undertones.
  • The controversy appears manufactured, with news outlets finding isolated negative viewpoints online and amplifying them into a larger narrative about backlash against the campaign.
  • American Eagle's Chief Marketing Officer had previously stated they would use "clever, even provocative language" and "push buttons" in their campaigns, suggesting the controversy might have been intentional marketing strategy.
  • American Eagle responded to the controversy with a statement: "It's always about the genes, her story. We continue to celebrate how everyone wears their A.E. Genes with confidence their way. Great genes look good on everyone."
  • The controversy expanded beyond the ad when Trump commented after Sydney Sweeney's voter registration was posted, and Lizzo referenced Sydney Sweeney having "great genes" in a new song.
  • Sydney Sweeney faced career implications with reports that her latest movie underperformed, being framed as "flopping following American Eagle Backlash" despite being a small indie film that wasn't expected to perform strongly.
  • Data shows mixed impact: foot traffic at American Eagle decreased 9% for the week beginning August 3rd, while American Eagle stock rose 30% over the last month.
  • A poll regarding the ad campaign showed 39% found it clever, only 12% found it offensive, and 48% were indifferent.
  • The controversy disproportionately focused on Sydney Sweeney rather than American Eagle, despite the brand likely being the strategic decision-maker behind the campaign's messaging.
  • Creating controversy as a marketing strategy may be counterproductive as consumers are increasingly exhausted by manufactured outrage and controversy in advertising.
  • The campaign might have been more effective focusing on aspirational marketing rather than using the potentially controversial double meaning of "genes/jeans."
  • Error Fix: I accidentally refer to American Eagle as American Apparel a couple times in the episode
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