American Attire’s billboards had been onerous to overlook when traversing Los Angeles within the 2000s. The ever present adverts for the L.A.-based clothes firm featured gritty, amateurish images of seemingly strange younger girls, posed suggestively, in numerous states of undress. As for the clothes, there wasn’t a lot of it. A tube sock right here, a thong there. American Attire’s attire clearly wasn’t the draw.
The underage look of the fashions was disturbing however not totally surprising given the controversial Calvin Klein adverts over earlier many years, and by the 12 months 2000, Britney Spears’ schoolgirl-meets-stripper-pole routine in her “Oops! … I Did it Once more” video was widespread with tweens and mothers alike. But there was one thing concerning the voyeuristic, predatory nature of American Enchantment’s advert marketing campaign that felt completely different, worse, past exploitative.
“Trainwreck: The Cult of American Attire,” a documentary now streaming on Netflix, explains why these billboards felt extra like prison proof than horny adverts. The 54-minute movie breaks down what was taking place on the opposite aspect of the digital camera on the firm, led by problematic founder and CEO Dov Charney, and there’s nothing hip or modern concerning the abuse chronicled in it, which options footage, analysis and firsthand accounts from former workers.
Dov Charney based American Attire and was its CEO till he was fired after allegations of misconduct.
(Netflix)
The doc is a part of a Netflix sequence that touches on messy, disastrous occasions, manufacturers and folks such because the Balloon Boy scandal and the so-called Poop Cruise. Excessive-end stuff it’s not, and this installment of the sequence isn’t nuanced or lengthy sufficient to be an in-depth exploration of a troubled firm and its risky founder. It does, nonetheless, lay naked an abusive tradition at American Attire and the way Charney — who shot most of the adverts himself — turned his personal alleged regressions right into a wildly profitable branding marketing campaign.
The documentary tracks the rise and fall of American Attire and its CEO from the corporate’s inception in 1989 to it turning into one of many largest garment producers in america till its chapter in 2015. Reimagining plain sweatshirts and different wardrobe fundamentals as hip alternate options to blingy denims and gawdy UGG boots, the L.A.-made clothes was promoted as “Ethically Made — Sweatshop Free.” It later garnered the unofficial title of indie sleaze, simply in time to resonate throughout a brand new factor referred to as social media.
Charney is seen in motion by means of reams of footage captured by workers and others in his orbit. Former employees inform their tales, recalling how they had been employed or superior into administration positions regardless of having no expertise. One remembers how new hires on the firm acquired a welcome present field that included a vibrator, a guide by Robert Greene titled “The 48 Legal guidelines of Energy,” a Leica digital camera and a Blackberry so Charney may contact them 24/7. They had been additionally requested to signal nondisclosure agreements which might later make it tough to carry Charney accountable for alleged misconduct.


EJ and Jonny are among the many former American Attire workers interviewed within the documentary. (Netflix)
Footage reveals Charney as a wiry, supercharged determine who ceaselessly berated his workers as “losers” and worse. He housed chosen workers at his Silver Lake mansion, the Garbutt Home, and so they included a gaggle of younger girls whose roles appeared to be as surrogates and enforcers for Charney — employees referred to them as Dov’s Women. Then in his 40s, he’s proven verbally accosting younger workers, a few of whom had been youngsters on the time. No less than one clip captures him parading round bare in entrance of two feminine workers.
After defining style for roughly a decade, the thriving firm started to nosedive by the 2010s as information of Charney’s inappropriate conduct and oppressive circumstances within the office surfaced. He was accused of mistreating younger workers within the firm’s shops and places of work, in addition to exploiting undocumented workers within the manufacturing unit, but it surely was allegations of sexual misconduct and assault within the office that made headlines, resulting in his ouster as CEO. Ladies who declare they had been sexually assaulted by Charney are interviewed within the documentary.
Charney didn’t disappear after his fall from grace. He based one other clothes producer, Los Angeles Attire, and he reportedly works on Yeezy, the style model created by Ye, the rapper previously often called Kanye West. Rolling Stone reported that Charney printed West’s controversial “White Lives Matter” T-shirt.
As for American Attire, it was purchased by a Canadian clothes firm that relaunched the model shortly earlier than the pandemic. The garments are now not made in L.A., however curiously, the indie sleaze billboard marketing campaign has returned to town. It’s disturbing in a throwback sort of method, pointing to a time when pedo-marketing was king, and the creepy people behind the adverts had been heralded as advertising and marketing geniuses.