Boston Herald

Dolce&Gabbana co-founders apologize

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BEIJING — The co-founders of Dolce&Gabbana have apologized in a video on Chinese social media after promotiona­l videos seen as racist and subsequent Instagram messages stoked a furor in one of the world’s largest markets for luxury goods. Domenico Dolce and Steffano Gabbana appeared in a nearly 1½ minute video posted on Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, saying they hope to be forgiven and will do their best to better understand and respect Chinese culture. “We have always been in love with China,” Dolce said. “We love your culture and we certainly have much to learn. That is why we are sorry if we made mistakes in the way we expressed ourselves.“The Italian fashion house has been in hot water for the videos and subsequent insulting remarks made by the Instagram accounts of both the company and Gabbana. It blamed hackers for the Instagram comments. The three promotiona­l videos, which have been deleted from the company’s Weibo account, feature a Chinese woman using chopsticks to eat pizza and other Italian food. Many Chinese social media users called the videos racist and full of outdated stereotype­s. In the apology video, the two designers wore black longsleeve shirts, the kind they often wear to runway shows, and sat with their hands folded at a large conference table in a room decorated with formal, red-gilded wallpaper. “We will never forget this experience and it will certainly never happen again,” Gabbana said, adding, “From the bottom of our hearts, we ask for forgivenes­s.” They finish the video by saying “sorry” in Chinese. The backlash forced Dolce&Gabbana to cancel a major extravagan­za earlier this week that the company had billed as one of its biggest shows ever outside of Italy. Chinese purchases at home and abroad account for about 30 percent of global luxury goods sales. Several screenshot­s showed Gabbana’s Instagram account referring to China with crude terms and emojis as he defended the promotiona­l videos. Zhang Ziyi, who starred in “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” said on one of her social media accounts that the Italian brand had “disgraced itself.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? CONTROVERS­Y: A man walks past a Dolce&Gabbana shop in Beijing.
GETTY IMAGES CONTROVERS­Y: A man walks past a Dolce&Gabbana shop in Beijing.

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