American Eagle Outfitters defends controversial Sydney Sweeney jeans ad

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American Eagle launched an ad blitz last week with the tagline “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.”

American Eagle launched an advertising blitz last week with the tagline, “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans”.

PHOTO: AMERICAN EAGLE/FACEBOOK

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NEW YORK – American Eagle Outfitters defended its media campaign featuring American actress Sydney Sweeney following criticism that the advertisements have racist undertones.

The spot “is and always was about the jeans”, the company said in a post on Instagram. American Eagle said it will “continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way”.

The apparel retailer launched an advertising blitz last week with the tagline, “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans”.

One of the campaign’s videos plays on the same-sounding word “genes” as Sweeney, 27, zips up her jeans and intones that “genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality and even eye colour”.

“My jeans are blue,” the star of drama series such as Euphoria (2019 to present) and The White Lotus (2021 to present) adds, flashing her blue eyes at the camera.

Billboards of actress Sydney Sweeney are seen outside an American Eagle Outfitters store in New York City on Aug 1, 2025.

PHOTO: AFP

The video sparked a debate online about whether the focus on the genes of a white, blonde woman conjured up the racist theory of eugenics.

Other social media users have said critics are reading too much into the ads.

When the campaign was initially unveiled on July 23, American Eagle’s shares rose.

“I think this is potentially one of the biggest gets in American Eagle history,” chief marketing officer Craig Brommers said in an interview with trade journal Women’s Wear Daily on July 23.

“Sydney Sweeney is the ‘It’ girl of the moment, and she is helping us create the ‘It’ jeans campaign of the season,” he added. 

US actress Sydney Sweeney on the red carpet for the Echo Valley premiere in London on June 10.

PHOTO: AFP

Data from Bloomberg Second Measure data, which tracks debit and credit card transactions from US consumers, has not shown any immediate impact on sales at American Eagle.

Analysts are closely watching spending at the retailer during the important back-to-school season. 

Some shoppers might be turned off by the ad campaign and the noise around it, said Ms Jessica Ramirez, managing director at retail analysis firm The Consumer Collective, and opt to shop at competitors such as Levi Strauss & Co, Abercrombie & Fitch or Gap. “There are other options out there,” she added. BLOOMBERG

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