Focus on the BIG picture.
Monday, Dec 08, 2025

The Sydney Sweeney and Jeans Storm: “The Outcome Surpassed Our Wildest Dreams”

American Eagle’s Chief Marketing Officer Craig Brommers breaks his silence on the controversial Sydney Sweeney campaign, defending the decision not to pull it despite online backlash and revealing it brought one million new customers in six weeks.
Two months after the uproar, American Eagle’s Chief Marketing Officer in the United States, Craig Brommers, has spoken publicly for the first time about the campaign starring Sydney Sweeney that sparked a cultural storm.

“Sydney Sweeney stayed with us, and we will definitely stay with her.

There were a few difficult moments, and we stood by each other,” said Brommers.

Brommers, who led the highly controversial campaign, had remained silent throughout the heated debate—one that some labeled as racially charged—after the commercials began gaining traction.

In an interview with Adweek, he spoke about the backlash, the decision not to withdraw the campaign, and its financial results.

“Just last Saturday night, it was still in the news—it was even featured in a sketch on Saturday Night Live.

I can’t believe that something in our advertising and marketing world is still attracting this level of attention ten weeks later,” said Brommers.

“Our goal wasn’t to join a cultural discussion but to define culture.

The outcome surpassed our wildest dreams”.

The campaign, launched at the end of June, featured Sweeney with the slogan: “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans”.

In the ad, she says: “Genes are passed down from parents to offspring and often determine traits such as hair color, personality, and even eye color.

My jeans are blue”.

The play on words between “great genes” and “great jeans” led many on the liberal and far-left spectrum to accuse the brand of promoting white supremacy.

Some even claimed it echoed Nazi racial rhetoric.

According to Brommers, “five years ago, the playbook might have been: the Chief Marketing Officer gets fired, the campaign is pulled immediately, and someone writes a big check to a certain organization.

I knew I didn’t need to worry about that scenario”.

Adweek reported that when the campaign launched on a Friday in late June, the initial response was overwhelmingly positive.

American Eagle’s stock jumped twenty-five percent on launch day, accompanied by broad media coverage.

By the end of the weekend, however, the tone shifted.

“I clearly remember sitting down with a cup of coffee, opening LinkedIn, and reading some really nasty comments for the first time,” recalled Brommers.

“It just stopped me in my tracks.

I was like, ‘Wow, where did this come from?’” He said the negative sentiment peaked the following Monday—the only day during the ten-week campaign when criticism outweighed support.

“Some people say this campaign was flooded with negativity.

That’s absolutely not true,” he emphasized.

As the narrative began to shift, Brommers quickly assembled a small team of internal and external partners to craft a strategy centered on restraint.

“On one hand, we had to act very quickly, but on the other hand, we did nothing,” he said.

Instead of reacting to the online noise, the brand sought feedback from “real Americans,” which, according to him, gave the company “a lot of confidence” to stay the course.

“There’s a crisis communication manual that tells you what to do in a situation like this.

We basically did the opposite.

We did nothing and simply analyzed the atmosphere,” he added.

While other marketing executives in his position might have feared losing their jobs amid such turmoil, Brommers said he had “one thousand percent support” from the CEO and board.

“Five years ago, the playbook could have been: the CMO gets fired, the campaign comes down immediately, and someone writes a big check to an organization.

I knew I didn’t have to worry about that scenario,” he explained.

Because American Eagle is publicly traded, the company entered a “quiet period” lasting more than two months after the campaign launch, meaning it could not share results or respond to criticism until weeks later.

Ultimately, the company revealed that the campaign brought in one million new customers within six weeks.

When asked what he would have done differently, Brommers was candid: “I would have bought more jeans inventory.

Some of those items sold out so fast.

Social media is very noisy—that’s not reality.

Understand what your customers are saying, and strengthen the relationship between the CEO and the CMO before something like this happens.

In the end, people will remember this for Sweeney and great jeans—and that was the original intent,” he concluded.
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
"The Great Filtering": Australia Blocks Hundreds of Thousands of Minors From Social Networks
Mark Zuckerberg Pulls Back From Metaverse After $70 Billion Loss as Meta Shifts Priorities to AI
Nvidia CEO Says U.S. Data-Center Builds Take Years while China ‘Builds a Hospital in a Weekend’
Indian Airports in Turmoil as IndiGo Cancels Over a Thousand Flights, Stranding Thousands
Hollywood Industry on Edge as Netflix Secures Near-$60 Bln Loan for Warner Bros Takeover
Trump Meets Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum for First Time at 2026 World Cup Draw
White House ‘Merch Room’ Draws Global Attention After Zelensky Seen in “4 More Years” Cap
Trump Taps Veteran D.C. Architect Shalom Baranes for Contested White House Ballroom Project
Drugs and Assassinations: The Connection Between the Italian Mafia and Football Ultras
Hollywood megadeal: Netflix acquires Warner Bros. Discovery for 83 billion dollars
The Disregard for a Europe ‘in Danger of Erasure,’ the Shift Toward Russia: Trump’s Strategic Policy Document
Two and a Half Weeks After the Major Outage: A Cloudflare Malfunction Brings Down Multiple Sites
Trump’s 2025 Security Blueprint Lambasts Europe, Reasserts U.S. Dominance in Americas
White House Strategy Warns Europe Could Be ‘Unrecognizable’ in Two Decades Amid Migration and EU Policies
U.S.–Saudi Rethink Deepens — Washington Moves Ahead Without Linking Riyadh to Israel Normalisation
Trump Administration Eyes Adopting Australian-Style Retirement System in US
Trump Hosts Congo and Rwanda Leaders for Peace and Minerals Pact at White House
Amazon Prepares to Expand Its Delivery Network as Talks with U.S. Postal Service Stall
Appeals Court Pauses Order to Remove National Guard — Trump Administration Can Keep Troops in Washington, D.C. for Now
Why Washington, D.C. Was Excluded as a 2026 World Cup Host Site
India backs down on plan to mandate government “Sanchar Saathi” app on all smartphones
White House Launches ‘Trump Accounts’ for Children Backed by $6.25 Billion Dell Family Donation
Melania Trump Unveils 2025 White House Christmas Theme ‘Home Is Where the Heart Is’ with Patriotic Cheer and Personal Touches
Google warns of AI “irrationality” just as Gemini 3 launch rattles markets
Top Consultancies Freeze Starting Salaries as AI Threatens ‘Pyramid’ Model
Macron Says Washington Pressuring EU to Delay Enforcement of Digital-Regulation Probes Against Meta, TikTok and X
Questions Swirl After Bank of America CEO Absent from High-Profile White House Dinner
Rep. Don Bacon Says White House Lacks ‘Moral Clarity’ on Ukraine Peace Plan
Melania Trump Ushers in Holiday Season with 2025 White House Christmas Tree
Starmer Defends Autumn Budget as Finance Chief Faces Accusations of Misleading Public Finances
Southeast Asia Floods Push Death Toll Above Nine Hundred as Storm Cluster Devastates Region
EU Firms Struggle with 3,000-Hour Paperwork Load — While Automakers Fear De Facto 2030 Petrol Car Ban
White House launches ‘Hall of Shame’ site to publicly condemn media outlets for alleged bias
250 Still Missing in the Massive Fire, 94 Killed. One Day After the Disaster: Survivor Rescued on the 16th Floor
Trump: National Guard Soldier Who Was Shot in Washington Has Died; Second Soldier Fighting for His Life
"I Would Have Given Her a Kidney": She Lent Bezos’s Ex-Wife $1,000 — and Received Millions in Return
European States Approve First-ever Military-Grade Surveillance Network via ESA
Joe and Hunter Biden Step Out Together in Nantucket — First Public Sighting Since Leaving the White House
Trump-McCrery Dispute Exposes Rift Over Gigantic New White House Ballroom Plan
Two National Guard Soldiers Shot Near White House; Afghan-Born Suspect in Custody, Trump Labels It Terror
Lamine Yamal? The ‘Heir to Messi’ Lost to Barcelona — and the Kingdom Is in a Frenzy
The Ukrainian Sumo Wrestler Who Escaped the War — and Is Captivating Japan
The Three Letters Lifting Google and Challenging Nvidia’s Dominance in the AI-Chip Market
Warner Music Group Drops Suit Against Suno, Launches Licensed AI-Music Deal
HP to Cut up to 6,000 Jobs Globally as It Ramps Up AI Integration
MediaWorld Sold iPad Air for €15 — Then Asked Customers to Return Them or Pay More
Tensions Surface in Trump-MBS Talks as Saudi Pushes Back on Israel Normalisation
COP30 Ends Without Fossil Fuel Phase-Out as US, Saudi Arabia and Russia Align in Obstruction Role
NYC Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani Reveals Unusual Book He Spotted at White House
Melania Trump Welcomes White House Christmas Tree in Festive Holiday Tradition
×