Times of Suriname

“It was never about gender”

VS exec apologizes:

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USA - The annual Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show made its return on Friday, and the feather and underwire extravagan­za was as decadent as ever. And while rising supermodel­s like Gigi Hadid and Kendall Jenner strutted the stage like pros, it was the controvers­y that happened offstage that made the biggest headlines.

Late Friday evening, Ed Razek, the chief marketing officer of Victoria’s Secret’s parent company L Brands, sent out a tweet apologizin­g for his earlier statements regarding the exclusion of transgende­r and plus-size models in the show.

“My remark regarding the inclusion of transgende­r models in the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show came across as insensitiv­e. I apologize”, Razek tweeted on the Victoria’s Secret account. “To be clear, we absolutely would cast a transgende­r model for a show. We’ve had transgende­r models come to castings. And like many others, they didn’t make it. But it was never about gender. I admire and respect their journey to embrace who they really are.”

Razek’s comments stem from the negative reaction regarding his comments in a recent Vogue interview, in which he claimed viewers don’t want to see more diverse models on the runway. “If you’re asking if we’ve considered putting a transgende­r model in the show or looked at putting a plus-size model in the show, we have. We invented the plus-size model show in what was our sister division, Lane Bryant. Lane Bryant still sells plussize lingerie, but it sells a specific range, just like every specialty retailer in the world sells a range of clothing”, Razek told Vogue. “As do we. We market to who we sell to, and we don’t market to the whole world.” He added that the company previously had a plus size-only project nearly twenty years ago, but that viewers didn’t tune in. “We attempted to do a television special for plussizes”, says Razek. “No one had any interest in it, still don’t.” Razek attributed the pressure to include transgende­r and plus-size models to ‘political correctnes­s’.

While the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show continues to be an internatio­nal phenomenon, sales at the store have suffered. In July, Forbes reported that the company had suffered a 1 percent decline in comparable sales in the five weeks ended July 7.

(Yahoo Style)

 ??  ?? The annual Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show made its return on Friday.
The annual Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show made its return on Friday.

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