Have you noticed that things tend to get more interesting when Kirstie Alley weighs in on a subject and gets bleeped out?
“Dude, you’re a #(#*#!
@@!!!$!,” the self-proclaimed “Fat Actress” told “Entertainment Tonight,” referring to Michael Jeffries, the CEO of Motherfucker Industries, I mean, Abercrombie &
Fitch.
As mostly everyone knows by now, Kirstie was reacting to a quote that Jeffries had given to Salon in 2006 that resurfaced this week, in which the CEO copped to the
brand’s “exclusionary” (i.e., no uglies-no-fatties) marketing tactics:
“We go after the cool kids… That’s why we hire good-looking people
in our stores. Because good-looking people attract other good-looking people, and we want to market to cool, good-looking people. We don’t market to anyone other than that.”
(The largest size that Abercrombie carries for women is a 10.)
Thus, with good reason, the outrageous 68-year-old Jeffries has lately become the nation’s
favorite punching bag.
The easiest shot? His face, a living Botox and cosmetic surgery experiment, which makes him look like a mix of Siegfried and Roy after having been
attacked by bees. He’s clearly no fan of Father Time, either. My favorite tweet among thousands asked him, “If you dislike fat, why do you inject so much of it into your
face?”
Greg Karber, an L.A. filmmaker, made news earlier in the week when he attempted a deeper, more meaningful response to the shocking Abercrombie ethos by going to
Skid Row in Los Angeles and distributing AF clothing to homeless people.
Posted to You Tube on Monday, his video, part of a “Fitch the Homeless” movement, has
already garnered more than 4.5 million views.
In fairness to Karber, he did this in response to a different but equally seditious AF company policy-- that the company burns
its leftover, unsold clothing rather than donating it to charity. (To keep the brand “integrity.”)
Still, I’m not alone in thinking that having 4 million viewers
guffawing at the grimy, smiling, toothless people wearing the AF brand only further marginalizes the homeless as the “other,” while playing right into Jeffries’ vigorously
non-liver-spotted hands.
Let’s face it, Jeffries actively courts controversy through his aggressively non-P.C. policies. (“I’ll okay that one ugly 200
pounder if you throw the guy in the wheelchair out,” he might be saying as he looks over store monitors from his headquarters—or not.) He might have a PR problem now and then, but
it’s not a marketing problem.
There are always lines around the block, packed with tourists, at the AF Fifth Avenue flagship store in New York City.
Is it the near-naked men with cartoon six-packs, greeting customers? Partly, perhaps. Is it because the air is bombarded with that awful AF fragrance? Probably not. It’s mostly
because the merchandise sells for almost double the price in Europe as it does here in the U.S., where it is still plenty pricey.
So that when foreign visitors come here, the stores
are like Mecca. (Similarly, when Levi’s jeans were black-marketed in the then-Soviet Union, they became a symbol of cool style in the West, and traded for the price of a Soviet car.)
I’m baffled as to how ads featuring Bruce Weber’s homo-erotic photography, pretty much the same mix since the early 1990s Calvin Klein days of handsome shirtless boys and a
near-naked girl thrown in as a prop every now and then, sold a generation of preppy, frat house dudes on the brand. But it did. I do get the sense that the brand popularity with the high school crowd
is fading, however, and Jeffries has to up the ante.
By Thursday, perhaps persuaded by company lawyers, Jeffries came out with a luke-warm statement of apology, saying that his old
quote had been “taken out of context.” But he did re-emphasize that Abercrombie “targets its marketing at a particular segment of customers.”
Still, he
added: “We are completely opposed to any discrimination, bullying, derogatory characterizations or other anti-social behavior based on race, gender, body type or other individual
characteristics."
Yes, perhaps, after being slapped with numerous lawsuits over discrimination in the workplace and all-white, all-thin-and beautiful hiring policies over the years,
that’s true. The Abercrombie brand has long been the subject of boycotts and girlcotts, with no real effect. Where to begin with other corporate salutes to tastelessness—like the fact that
the company sold padded bikini tops and thongs for little girls? Or that in 2002, A&F sold a shirt that featured the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry Service – Two Wongs Can Make It White"
with smiling figures in conical Asian field worker hats? The examples are legion.
Certainly, the brand that’s no longer cool with high-schoolers has been talked about
non-stop, in every medium, for the past week, and has gotten hundreds of millions of dollars in free air time and publicity.
I’d say that’s a win, a perverse win,
yes, but still a win, for Jeffries.
And perhaps his rebuilt punching bag face is a metaphor—dude might be, in Kirstie Allen’s world, a “*^&^^$#!”
but he takes a lickin’ and keeps on tickin’.