WWD Digital Daily

Diet Prada Cofounders Push Back Against Dolce & Gabbana Suit

● Tony Liu and Lindsey Schuyler responded to Dolce & Gabbana’s defamation suit in Milan following controvers­y over the Italian brand’s ads.

- BY SINDHU SUNDAR

A while after Dolce & Gabbana’s show in Shanghai was called off amid backlash in China over the Italian brand’s ad campaign videos posted on Weibo, Diet Prada’s founders say they are fighting back against a defamation suit that the Italian brand had filed against them in the wake of the furor.

On Thursday, Diet Prada’s cofounders Tony Liu and Lindsey Schuyler said they have filed a response to a lawsuit that Dolce & Gabbana had filed against them in 2019 in a Milan civil trial court. The Italian brand’s suit against them had sought 4 million euros in damages for “lost revenues and harm to the brand,” according to a statement by the defendants.

The legal dispute followed the widely reported last-minute cancellati­on of Dolce & Gabbana’s Shanghai runway show in 2018, after advertisem­ents by the Italian brand, titled “eating with chopsticks,” which portrayed an Asian model being instructed on how to eat foods like pizza, canoli and spaghetti. In addition, messages disparagin­g China, apparently from the Instagram account of designer Stefano Gabbana, surfaced around the time. The Diet Prada Instagram account had called out the ad campaign and the messages from Gabbana, which Gabbana and the company had said were the result of his account being hacked.

“As an Asian American, I’m part of a community that is often misreprese­nted. Like many people of color in the United States, there’s pain that stems from seeing ourselves depicted through inaccurate, harmful stereotype­s,” Liu wrote in the statement.

A representa­tive for Dolce & Gabbana couldn’t be reached for comment on Thursday. Liu and Schuyler are being represente­d by the Fashion Law Institute, part of the Fordham Law School, as well as local counsel in Italy, according to their statement.

“Since our founding in 2010, a key part of the Fashion Law Institute’s mission has been to provide pro bono legal assistance to industry profession­als — in this case, individual­s working to hold the fashion industry to high ethical standards, to defend the right to freedom of speech, and to promote diversity, equity and inclusion by criticizin­g anti-Asian caricature­s,” Prof. Susan Scafidi, founder and director of the Fashion Law Institute at Fordham, said in a statement.

It’s not clear what the next steps of the case are — such disputes could settle, as is often the goal of parties that often seek to avert protracted litigation. But a settlement in the case hasn’t transpired so far. The court could weigh the defendants’ response, and decide how the claims should proceed.

 ??  ?? Dolce & Gabbana in New York City on Black Friday, 2020.
Dolce & Gabbana in New York City on Black Friday, 2020.

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