The controversy that wears jeans (and read genetics)
It turns out that in the incredibly serious and transcendental world of jeans advertising, last July, actress and model Sydney Sweeney had the audacity to star in an ad. Not just any ad, but one for the American Eagle brand that, surprise, unleashed the fury of the digital controversy. Because, as we well know, nothing unites humanity more than a heated debate over a play on words.
The trigger for this Shakespearean drama was a slogan of abysmal depth: “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.” A phrase that, in a display of linguistic creativity, played with the phonetic similarity between “jeans” (pants) and “genes” (that biology thing). What for some was an innocent double meaning, for others became definitive proof of a Eurocentric discourse promoting the superiority of Caucasian features: white skin, blonde hair and blue eyes. Because, clearly, the best way to sell a pair of jeans is by implying genetic purity. The campaign, as it could not be otherwise, divided the audience on social networks, demonstrating once again that there is nothing like a misunderstanding to fuel the hostile political environment in the United States.
The interview where nothing happened (but everything happened)
Let’s fast forward three months. While the world eagerly awaited a tearful apology, Sydney Sweeney, who also works as a film producer, decided that her role in this drama was not that of the repentant villain. In an interview for GQ magazine with journalist Katherine Stoeffel, in the not at all cliché setting of the Chateau Marmont hotel in Los Angeles, the actress seemed as surprised as someone who discovers that water is wet. He stated that the public’s reaction was a surprise, a plot twist that no one saw coming.
The interviewer, displaying a tenacity that would make a dog pale with a bone, offered him a space to address the issue. “Is there anything you’d like to comment on about the ad itself?” he asked. Sweeney’s response was a master class in linguistic economics: “The ad speaks for itself.” A phrase that, without a doubt, will be studied in communication faculties for decades.
But Stoeffel did not give up. In an attempt to get some juice, he elaborated: “And the criticism of the content which was basically that white people shouldn’t joke about genetic superiority… I wanted to give you a chance to talk specifically about that.” The actress’s reply was as firm as it was evasive: “I think that when I have a topic I want to talk about, people will listen to me.” Or what is the same: “Next question, please.”
The reactions on digital platforms were immediate. On the one hand, a legion of admirers applauded her firmness and confidence, elevating her to the category of feminist icon. On the other hand, her detractors accused her of a monumental lack of empathy. And, of course, a third group decided that the real villain was the interviewer, who was accused of ambushing the poor, defenseless millionaire. Platform Because nothing defines a person’s ideology better than a denim ad. Another user philosophized: “The confidence with which Sydney Sweeney defends herself is 100 times more attractive than any photo she could post.” While another summed up the situation with: “Try in every way possible to intimidate Sydney Sweeney into apologizing for a jeans ad.” The final straw came with the comment: “Sydney Sweeney made no apologies for being a beautiful, white, blonde, blue-eyed woman, and some people are very angry about it.” Because, apparently, the real crime was being born with a certain phenotype and daring not to flagellate oneself for it in public.
In the great theater of marketing and selective outrage, this episode leaves a clear lesson: a play on words can be more powerful than any speech, and refusing to participate in the media circus is, in itself, the most powerful statement. Or maybe it just shows that we’re so bored that a clothing campaign becomes the geopolitical debate of the summer. You decide.
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