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What happened to abercrombie and fitch

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What was the reason behind Abercrombie and Fitch s downfall

(Fun fact: the documentary says that the team that was deciding these slogans had one Asian-American as its member)

Former Abercrombie and Fitch CEO accused of exploiting young men for sex

The former CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch has been accused of exploiting young men for sex at events he and his partner hosted in the US and around the world, according to a BBC investigation.

Most of the men also allege that a middleman, who was hired by the fashion brand’s former boss Mike Jeffries, sexually “auditioned” them by requesting or offering to perform oral sex on them, before the young men were introduced to him and his partner, Matthew Smith.

As part of a two-year investigation for Panorama, the BBC reporter Rianna Croxford spoke to eight men who described attending events between 2009 and 2015 that involved sex acts and were run for Jeffries, 79, and Smith, 60.

Jeffries, who was once one of America’s highest-paid CEOs, stepped down from A&F in 2014. Half the men recruited have alleged that they were initially misled about the nature of the events or were not told sex was expected. Others said they understood the events would involve sex, but not exactly what was expected of them.

Some of the men alleged they were exploited or abused and several told the BBC the possibility of modelling contracts with A&F was raised before they met Jeffries and Smith.

They also told the BBC that, at the events, Jeffries and Smith would engage in sexual activity with about four men or “direct” them to have sex with each other. Afterwards, the men said staff at the event handed them envelopes filled with thousands of dollars in cash. All except one said they felt harmed by the experience.

Appearing on a Panorama special episode, The Abercrombie Guys: The Dark Side of Cool, one of the young men, the former model Barrett Pall, told Croxford: “My feeling of being in that room was: an animal. I was not a human to any of these people. I was a body. I was being presented to someone, to do what they wanted with.

“What happened to me changed my life – and not for the better,” he added, and appeared to break down on camera.

Two former US prosecutors, Brad Edwards and Elizabeth Geddes, have called for an investigation to determine whether charges for sex trafficking should be brought, after independently reviewing the BBC’s evidence.

The men described the middleman they met as missing part of his nose, which he covered with a snakeskin patch. The BBC has identified him as James Jacobson.

David Bradberry, then 23, said he was introduced to Jacobson by an agent who described him as the gatekeeper to “the owners” of A&F in 2010, but said there was no mention of sex.

At their meeting, he said Jacobson suggested A&F’s official photographer should take his picture. Then, Bradberry said: “Jim made it clear to me that unless I let him perform oral sex on me, that I would not be meeting with Abercrombie and Fitch or Mike Jeffries.”

“I was paralysed,” he said. “It was like he was selling fame. And the price was compliance.”

What was the reason behind Abercrombie and Fitch’s downfall?

What was the reason behind Abercrombie and Fitch's downfall?

Netflix’s new documentary, White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch brings to light the reason for Abercrombie and Fitch’s downfall: racist toxic work culture

Imagine you are back in 2004, drinking your Starbucks, listening to music on your iPod Classic, holding bags from Victoria’s Secret and Ralph Lauren and all ready to walk into an Abercrombie and Fitch store to buy their newest jeans and T-shirts.

While brands like Starbucks, Apple and Ralph Lauren continue to dominate the pop culture, Abercrombie and Fitch have long been forgotten. While ex-CEO Mike Jeffries was the reason why the brand was known to be the ‘coolest brand of the 90s and 00s’, Netflix’s new documentary, White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch follows the reason why A&F was able to easily shoot to fame and plummet down.

Everyone smelled like Abercrombie and Fitch cologne in the 1990s — whether they wanted to or not. White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch is now on Netflix pic.twitter.com/sCM7887dJl

— Netflix (@netflix) April 19, 2022

The documetary was able to explain viewers, in quite a detail, that there was one core reason why A&F failed: racist and toxic work culture.

Photo: Netflix

Photo: Netflix

The once uber-cool brand or how former brand model Ryan Daharsh explains it in the documentary, “If you weren’t wearing Abercrombie, you weren’t cool,” was known to follow strict standards, designed by Jeffries himself. And by standards, we don’t just mean in terms of clothing but also how the employees and models presented themselves at the A&F stores.

When Jeffries took over Abercrombie and Fitch in 1992 as the CEO, his goal was to create turn the brand into an all-American, exclusive place for high school and college students to shop from.

Raise your hand if you have ever been personally victimized by Abercrombie and Fitch. pic.twitter.com/d9SNf128MQ

— NetflixFilm (@NetflixFilm) April 23, 2022

To do so, he found a way to merge Calvin Klein’s sex appeal and the all-American preppiness of Ralph Lauren. As Washington Post’s senior critic-at-large Robin Givhan says in the documentary, “Just aspirational enough but not so expensive that it was out of reach.”

But for Jeffries, that wasn’t enough. He made sure Abercrombie employees in the stores fit the image of the “All-American” look, meaning that A&F recruiters were hiring only “good-looking people”.

A&F recruited “good looking people” by focusing on particular college campuses in the area and go after the best looking frat guys to become models or employees.

Former A&F recruiter, Christopher Clayton confirms this in the documentary, “As a manager at Abercrombie, they teach you very early on about recruiting. You don’t just have to recruit but you have to recruit good-looking people. This is what good-looking looks like. We literally had a book.”

I worked for Abercrombie in 2005. In my group interview we were told that “model” was the job title for attractive customer-facing employees .. and the “impact” role was for non-attractive team members in the stock room. IN THE INTERVIEW. Should I reveal more? #WhiteHOT #tea

— candacewithacha (@candacewithacha) April 20, 2022

The book that Clayton mentions specified what was acceptable and passed as good looking in an employee. The book, also known as the company’s aesthetic manual said that only natural hairstyles were acceptable on employees. Dreadlocks were not acceptable. Gold chains for guys weren’t allowed and female employees were only able to wear subtle jewelry.

The key words found in the book were: Natural, American, Classic: The A&F look

Notably, the documentary also highlights A&F’s racist hiring process. As multiple ex-employees mentioned in the documentary, people of colour, be that any colour, were not employed at the stores as ‘models’.

watching #WhiteHot and cheering for the bravery of Carla Barrientos, Dr. @anthonyocampo, and Jennifer Sheahan, the former Abercrombie employees who spoke out against discrimination and paved the way for changeWhite Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch is now streaming pic.twitter.com/ZBYsLInOqv

— Golden (@netflixgolden) April 19, 2022

If that wasn’t enough, the brand was also producing graphic t-shirts with racist caricatures of buck-tooth, slant-eyes Asians with racist slogans that read, “Pizza Dojo: You Love Long Time: Eat In or Wok Out” or “Wong Brothers Laundry Service: Two Wongs Can Make It White”.

(Fun fact: the documentary says that the team that was deciding these slogans had one Asian-American as its member)

Asian-Americans protested against these t-shirts and eventually Abercrombie had to remove these from stores, saying, “We thought Asians would like these shifts.”

But the protests were only the beginning of A&F’s fall. The brand went on to face a class-action discrimination lawsuit, sexual misconduct allegations against the brand’s primary photographer Bruce Weber during the early days of #MeToo, the infamous 2006 Salon interview of Mike Jeffries which led to a 2013 petition for inclusive-sized clothing and former L Brands CEO and A&F owner Les Wexner’s ties with convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.

By 2014, Mike Jeffries was forced to quit as CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch and vaished from public eye.

Released on April 19, White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch, the documentary brought important themes that were prevelant during the 2000s back into public view. The documentary has been able to create enough storm for A&F to release a statement of its own.

Check it our here:

Any guesses if there will be a Victoria’s Secret or Forever 21 documentary soon?

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