In the hyper-polarized landscape of 21st-century fame, the line between a celebrity endorsement and a political statement has become perilously thin. No one seems to have learned this lesson more harshly in recent memory than Sydney Sweeney, the Emmy-nominated actress whose meteoric rise to stardom has been punctuated by a series of controversies that culminated in a firestorm partnership with retail giant American Eagle. What began as a seemingly clever marketing campaign around “great jeans” quickly devolved into a culture war, dragging Sweeney, her family, and the brand into a vortex of accusations, online vitriol, and real-world consequences, including a reported “traffic drop” that has left the industry reeling.

Sweeney, the 27-year-old star of HBO’s gritty teen drama Euphoria and the rom-com hit Anyone But You, has built a career on portraying complex, often troubled characters. Her on-screen vulnerability, combined with a bombshell aesthetic reminiscent of classic Hollywood, made her an ideal face for a brand like American Eagle, which aims to capture the hearts and wallets of a young, trend-conscious demographic. The campaign, launched in the summer of 2025, was built on a simple, punny tagline: “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.” However, in a move that would prove fateful, the campaign’s promotional materials played heavily on the homophone “genes.”

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In one now-infamous video, Sweeney looks into the camera and explains, “Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color.” After a dramatic pause, she adds, “My jeans are blue.” The visual of Sweeney—a conventionally beautiful, blonde-haired, blue-eyed white woman—paired with this dialogue, immediately set off alarm bells for a segment of the online community. Critics were quick to accuse the brand of promoting eugenics and trafficking in racially charged “dog whistles” that seemed to glorify an Aryan ideal of beauty. The internet, as it is wont to do, erupted.

The backlash was swift and merciless. Social media platforms were flooded with posts decrying the campaign as tone-deaf and irresponsible, with some labeling it “fascist-coded propaganda.” For many, the ad was not just a clumsy marketing misstep but a deliberate nod to divisive ideologies at a time of heightened social and political tension. The controversy was not Sweeney’s first brush with this kind of scrutiny. In 2022, she faced a similar outcry after posting photos from her mother’s 60th birthday party, where some guests were seen wearing hats resembling MAGA caps and “Blue Lives Matter” shirts. At the time, Sweeney pleaded for calm, tweeting, “You guys this is wild. An innocent celebration for my moms milestone 60th birthday has turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention. Please stop making assumptions.”

Her plea did little to quell the storm then, and the American Eagle campaign reignited the debate over her personal and familial political leanings with a vengeance. Public records, unearthed by journalists and internet sleuths, revealed that a Sydney B. Sweeney had registered as a Republican in Florida in June 2024. While never officially confirmed by her team to be the actress, the revelation added a potent new layer to the controversy, transforming it from a debate about marketing ethics into a full-blown political proxy war.

As the controversy raged, Sweeney found herself in an unenviable position, caught between a desire to protect her burgeoning career in a largely liberal Hollywood and the intense pressure from a newly energized conservative base that began to champion her as a symbol of defiance against “woke cancel culture.” This complex dynamic came to a head during a public appearance where Sweeney, seemingly addressing the relentless focus on her appearance, wore a t-shirt emblazoned with the phrase, “Sorry for having great tits.” The move was hailed by some as a brilliant, defiant clapback and criticized by others as a flippant dismissal of the very serious concerns being raised about her brand partnerships.

Meanwhile, American Eagle was in full damage control mode. The brand initially stood by its campaign, issuing a statement that read: “’Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans’ is and always was about the jeans. Her Jeans. Her Story. We’ll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way.” However, as the negative press mounted and calls for a boycott grew louder, the most controversial video was quietly scrubbed from the company’s social media channels.

But the most shocking development was yet to come. Reports began to surface from retail analytics firms suggesting a tangible impact on American Eagle’s bottom line. One firm noted a significant “traffic drop” in the weeks following the campaign’s peak controversy, with one report claiming a staggering 9% year-over-year decline in foot traffic at their stores. The sharpest dips were noted in more conservative regions of the country, suggesting that the backlash was not just an online phenomenon confined to liberal circles, but a complex issue with unpredictable, real-world consequences. While correlation does not equal causation, the timing was impossible to ignore. After months of steady growth, the sudden downturn seemed inextricably linked to the cultural firestorm ignited by their famous new face.

The saga of Sydney Sweeney and American Eagle serves as a stark, cautionary tale for celebrities and brands navigating the treacherous waters of modern public relations. It highlights a cultural landscape where every choice is scrutinized, every association is dissected, and every message is filtered through a deeply partisan lens. Sweeney’s journey from celebrated actress to the reluctant epicenter of a culture war reveals the impossible tightrope that public figures must walk. An attempt to be apolitical is often interpreted as a political statement in itself, and silence can be as deafening as a public declaration.

For American Eagle, the fallout is a lesson in the high-stakes game of celebrity endorsements. In hitching their wagon to a star, they also inherited her public baggage, intended or not. The “great jeans” campaign, conceived to be clever and provocative, ultimately became a case study in how quickly a brand can lose control of its own narrative. In the end, the story is about more than just a pair of jeans. It’s about the commodification of identity, the weaponization of controversy, and the chaotic, unpredictable intersection of commerce, celebrity, and a deeply divided culture. As the dust settles, both Sweeney and American Eagle are left to ponder a difficult question: in today’s world, is any publicity truly good publicity?