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Actress Sydney Sweeney has spoken out for the first time about the storm surrounding her viral American Eagle campaign, which drew both fierce criticism and unexpected praise from political leaders.
The ad, featuring the tagline “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans,” sparked accusations of promoting “whiteness” and eugenics. Now, Sweeney says the experience was “surreal,” after President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance came to her defence amid the escalating culture war over the ad.
Sydney Sweeney calls the experience “surreal”
In a recent GQ interview promoting her film Christy, Sweeney described her reaction to seeing the nation’s top leaders discuss her ad.
“It was surreal,” she said, adding that she never expected a simple brand campaign to become part of a national conversation about race and identity.Sweeney also addressed reports claiming the controversy hurt American Eagle’s sales. “I was aware of the numbers as it was going,” she said. “So when I saw headlines saying in-store visits were down, none of it was true. It was all made up.”Despite the online uproar, American Eagle has continued to back the actress, maintaining that the campaign was designed as an inclusive celebration of confidence and individuality.
The ad that sparked a political storm
The controversy began when American Eagle’s campaign featuring Sweeney went viral over the summer. The tagline, a cheeky play on words referencing her “jeans” and “genes,” was meant as a light-hearted slogan. However, some progressive commentators, including Kean University professor Robin Landa, linked the ad to the eugenics movement, arguing it celebrated “white genetic superiority.”The claim triggered intense debate online, transforming what was intended as a denim promotion into a flashpoint in America’s broader culture wars.
Critics accused the campaign of being tone-deaf, while supporters saw the backlash as another example of political overreach into pop culture.
Trump and Vance step in
The controversy gained national attention when President Trump and Vice President JD Vance publicly weighed in.Trump praised Sweeney’s ad as “fantastic” after learning she was a registered Republican, telling reporters he thought the campaign was being unfairly attacked.
“She’s a registered Republican? Now I love her ad,” he quipped.Vance, meanwhile, defended Sweeney on the Ruthless podcast, criticising progressives for turning a “normal jeans ad” into a political issue. “You have a normal, all-American girl doing a normal jeans ad,” he said. “And they’ve somehow managed to make it a culture war.”Their comments reframed the debate, turning Sweeney into an unlikely political figure in a discussion that stretched far beyond fashion.
The deeper debate: Fashion, identity, and free speech
The Sweeney controversy has reignited debates over the role of advertising in shaping cultural narratives. Experts remain divided over whether the ad’s phrasing was an innocent pun or an example of tone-deaf marketing in an age of hyper-political awareness.Cultural analysts argue the backlash reveals how advertising, celebrity endorsements and political discourse have become inseparable in the social media era.
“We’re living in a moment where even jeans can become a political statement,” one media observer noted.For many conservatives, the episode has become emblematic of the backlash against “cancel culture.” For progressives, it highlights the ongoing scrutiny over representation and racial messaging in brand imagery.
Moving forward: “I know who I am”
Sweeney has made it clear she intends to move past the controversy. “I know who I am. I know what I value. I know that I’m a kind person,” she told GQ. “I don’t really let other people define who I am.”



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