Abercrombie & Filth: Inside a predator’s playground



Some predators hide in plain sight, shocking those around them when their crimes are finally revealed. Others give off subtle — and not-so-subtle — clues that something is deeply amiss.

Former Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries, arrested on sex trafficking and interstate prostitution charges last week, falls squarely in the latter category.

Victims were reportedly subjected to horrific experiences, including being injected with liquid Viagra by men dressed in Abercrombie uniforms.

During his time at the helm of the iconic American brand, Jeffries pursued a relentlessly hyper-sexualized marketing strategy built around homoerotic imagery and a cult-like worship of half-naked teens.

As this fetishization of youthful innocence intensified, Jeffries' face — like a reversal of Oscar Wilde's "The Picture of Dorian Gray" — seemed to bear witness to his depravity. A nightmarish regimen of fillers and plastic surgery turned the blandly handsome executive into a grotesque parody of the ideal Abercrombie customer.

As one Reddit wag put it, "He looks like he was bobbing for apples in a bucket of bees."

Epstein redux

The revelations surrounding Jeffries mirror the monstrous abuses of Jeffrey Epstein, with the former CEO reportedly using his power to orchestrate a calculated pattern of sexual exploitation. Like Epstein, Jeffries also had a private jet.

The indictment paints a grim picture. Specifically, an international sex trafficking ring as part of which Abercrombie’s brand was weaponized to lure and trap vulnerable young men, exploiting their ambitions with false promises of professional opportunities.

From 2008 to 2015, Jeffries, along with his partner Matthew Smith and employee James Jacobson, allegedly ran this operation with impunity all while exerting tight control over the company.

This was both a full-time operation and a depraved hobby.

Final sale

Witness accounts and legal filings describe a sordid quest for sexual gratification, with Jeffries and Smith luring young men with lavish trips to luxurious destinations in Europe, the Hamptons, and Morocco.

Once there, theses victims were reportedly subjected to horrific experiences, including being injected with liquid Viagra by men dressed in Abercrombie uniforms — agents of Jeffries who served more as enforcers than employees.

One Los Angeles man recounted being coerced into Jeffries’ hotel suite and enduring unwanted sexual advances that escalated to forced acts despite his repeated attempts to say no.

Jeffries headed Abercrombie from 1992 until 2014, turning it into one of the most successful clothing brands of the new millennium and generating massive profits for the company. Given the brazenness of Jeffries alleged behavior, the frantic efforts of current Abercrombie leadership to distance themselves from the scandal ring hollow.

It’s delusional to think Jeffries and his accomplices acted completely under the radar. His predatory actions were fueled by a culture of silence, sustained by a network of enablers who willfully ignored the abuse. As in Epstein's case, powerful people could have intervened and stopped the abuse. They simply chose not to.

J Cruel

Jeffries’ control of Abercrombie extended far beyond the brand’s image. That he even dictated the attire and behavior of his private jet staff reveals a tyrant detached from reality, consumed by his own twisted desires.

Jeffries' dictatorial rule went unchallenged for years — and no doubt would've continued had he continued to deliver. His downfall was not the result of a reckoning for his crimes but a response to declining sales and changing cultural attitudes that made his vision unsustainable.

But the issue, I suggest, goes far beyond Jeffries himself. This is a story of a brand culture that fostered tyranny and silenced dissent, one that thrived on reducing people to their body fat percentages.

Abercrombie’s entire aesthetic — a fixation on youth, beauty, and chiseled abs — was built on a foundation of control and exploitation. The implications of this culture are not isolated to one corrupt CEO but extend to an entire industry, where the commodification of innocence creates an environment ripe for abuse.

More precisely, the abuse of children.

Bait and Fitch

A recent Stop The Traffik report highlights the broader reality of the modeling industry, where hopes and dreams are weaponized by traffickers and predators.

In countries like Colombia, Ethiopia, and Russia, assurances of a glamorous lifestyle are used to bait young, impoverished individuals into exploitative situations. Promises of modeling careers quickly become coercive, trapping victims in cycles of manipulation and sexual exploitation.

The entire industry is run by multi-millionaires and billionaires, people with their own private security and private islands. People who, on the whole, play by a very different set of rules. Or no rules at all.

Dirty laundry

As we reflect on Abercrombie & Fitch’s dark legacy of sexualizing teens, it’s vital to remember that this culture was crafted by an immoral predator. Naturally, the company hopes you’ll forget. In fact, it’s banking on it.

Rather incredibly, retail analysts suggest the brand's campaign to memory hole its sleazy past is working. Newer customers are too young to remember while older ones seem to have accepted Abercrombie's reinvention into something more muted and mature.

But no amount of rebranding can erase the reality that Abercrombie didn’t just enable Mike Jeffries — it rewarded him handsomely. It wasn’t merely a matter of giving a platform to a possible psychopath (and I don’t use that term lightly); Abercrombie empowered and enriched him while turning a blind eye to his behavior.

For all its attempts to exorcise the memory of Jeffries, the company will forever be tied to a man whose degeneracy nearly destroyed it. The exploitation of kids wasn’t an accident — it was the business model. Jeffries was the architect, and Abercrombie was his enabler.

And that’s a legacy you can’t wash away.

Target to stop accepting this type of payment next week



Target has announced plans to stop accepting a classic form of payment starting next week.

Target will no longer accept personal checks from customers starting on July 15.

To justify the decision, the massive nationwide retailer cited that shoppers rarely utilized the traditional payment method.

“Due to extremely low volumes, we’ll no longer accept personal checks starting July 15,” a representative for the company wrote in a statement, according to KTLA. “We have taken several measures to notify guests in advance to aid an easy and efficient checkout experience.”

The Target spokesperson attempted to calm the fears of check users by pointing out all of the forms of payment that the Minnesota-based retail behemoth does accept.

“Target is committed to creating an easy and convenient checkout experience, and that includes providing our guests with numerous ways to pay, including our new Target Circle Cards (formerly known as Target RedCard); cash; digital wallets; SNAP/EBT; buy now, pay later services; and credit and debit cards,” the spokesperson said.

Target's website notes that its stores do not accept the following payment options:

  • Foreign checks and currency: Target doesn’t accept currency or coins from foreign countries. However, depending on where the Target store is located, stores may be able to accept Canadian dollars or Mexican pesos. Target stores update exchange rates weekly.
  • Mall Certificates and Chamber Bucks: Exception - select stores accept payments using mall certificates or chamber bucks. Call your local store to find out if they are accepted.
  • Money orders and cashier's checks: Only accepted as payment on credit accounts
  • Business checks are not accepted.
  • Merchant gift cards (e.g., Disney), except Starbucks gift cards (which can be used at the in-store Starbucks registers)

The Federal Reserve has noticed that the use of personal checks has declined significantly in recent years. The Federal Reserve Payments Study – which collected data for the 2021 calendar year – discovered that checks used for payments declined at a rate of 7.2% per year since 2018, dropping to 11.2 billion in sales.

Despite the drop in the number of checks used, the value of checks increased from $1,908 in 2018 to $2,430 in 2021. The increase stems from fewer checks being written, but they were still used for higher-priced transactions such as rent and automobile purchases.

Accelerating the decline of personal checks was the COVID-19 pandemic, as more customers and businesses adopted contactless and digital payment methods.

Experts believe the use of personal checks will only continue to decline as more people utilize typical digital payments and up-and-coming cryptocurrencies.

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California Law Would Fine Retailers For Only Having ‘Girl’ And ‘Boy’ Toy Sections

California retailers that refuse to incorporate 'gender-neutral' toy sections could face hundreds of dollars in fines under a new state law.

Netflix will open retail locations with themed restaurants and live entertainment: Report



Netflix is preparing to make further incursions into the real in order to promote its virtual offerings.

Josh Simon, the streaming giant's vice president of consumer products, recently told Bloomberg that Netflix is planning to open multiple brick-and-mortar locations. While the company has rolled out dozens of pop-up stores in recent years, the so-called Netflix House will reportedly be a fixed establishment where fans can immerse themselves in the fantasies they alternatively consume on the couch.

The company reportedly plans to have two Netflix Houses by 2025 and many more internationally soon thereafter.

"We've seen how much fans love to immerse themselves in the world of our movies and TV shows, and we've been thinking a lot about how we take that to the next level," said Simon.

The company's intention appears more ambitious than simply creating its equivalent to the Disney Store, but not so ambitious as to create its own version of Disneyland. These complexes will combine retail, dining, and ticketed live entertainment.

According to Bloomberg, while the Netflix House will be fixed in place, the menu, retail space, and live experiences will rotate, likely depending on whatever series is most popular or in need of promotion. Depending on the installation, the restaurant experience could range from casual to high-end dining. As for the particulars of the store's features, Simon provided no details, as the final decisions have yet to be made.

Notwithstanding the ambiguity over what might be found inside the Netflix Houses, the company appears to have beta-tested some features in recent years.

In July 2021, the company opened a faux video store in Los Angeles emulating the style of a 1990s rental shop to promote "Fear Street."

In November 2021, Netflix launched "Stranger Things" pop-up stores in New York City and Los Angeles, peddling limited-edition merchandise and photo opportunities aimed at generating buzz for the show.

The company did something similar in NYC in 2022, teaming up with Bloomingdale's to promote the second season of its show "Bridgerton" and push its corresponding "regency-core" aesthetic, reported Variety.

The company went a step farther last October, opening its first multi-title brick-and-mortar destination in Los Angeles. The 10,000-square-foot, two-story store, which remained opened to the public until Jan. 6, sold paraphernalia from Netflix original series and the makings of social media content as a means to generate buzz.

Netflix's consumer-facing pitch went thusly: "Watching at home is one way to immerse yourself in your favorite Netflix shows — but now, you can experience your faves IRL, and even take a bit of that world home with you. ... In addition to being able to score merch you can’t find anywhere else, Netflix at The Grove will also offer interactive photo opportunities."

There is also precedent for Netflix dining experiences.

In March 2022, Netflix teamed up with Postmates and a pair of chefs from a restaurant featured in its docuseries "Bad Vegan" to briefly roll out a three-course meal for fans in NYC.

In another marketing ploy this past June, Nerflix launched a pop-up eatery in Los Angeles called Netflix Bites, again featuring chefs in some of its shows.

Netflix has launched over 40 pop-up locations to date.

Variety noted that while the planned Netflix Houses amount to a natural progression, their purpose will be to support the streaming service, a least for the foreseeable future.

Rick Munarriz, a senior media analyst with the investment advice company the Motley Fool, told NPR, "Netflix is an ecosystem. It opened a merchandise shop a couple of years ago. It's investing in mobile games. It's more than just a place for your remote control to gravitate to at the end of a long day. ... Success in the real world through location-based entertainment is the spoils of victory for a leading tastemaker. If Disney and NBC Universal can operate theme parks, I give Netflix a decent shot of succeeding with this venture."

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Target to shutter 9 stores in Democrat-run cities on account of unrelenting crime



Target is pulling up stakes on select stores in crime-ridden, Democratic cities, joining the host of other retailers looking for greener pastures.Evidently the company's efforts to lock aisles of products behind security glass wasn't a winning solution.

The company is shuttering nine stores across four states: one in New York City's East Harlem neighborhood; three in the San Francisco Bay Area; three in Oregon's increasingly anarchical city of Portland; and two in Seattle, Washington.

A combined 150 stores will remain in the geographies affected by the Oct. 21 closures, reported ABC News.

According to Neighborhood Scout, the chances of becoming a victim of a property crime in these areas is: 1 in 51 in New York City; 1 in 20 in San Francisco and 1 in 17 in Oakland, CA; 1 in 17 in Portland; and 1 in 18 in Seattle.

The company made clear that the reason behind the closure was crime, reported CNN.

"We cannot continue operating these stores because theft and organized retail crime are threatening the safety of our team and guests, and contributing to unsustainable business performance," the company said in a statement. "We know that our stores serve an important role in their communities, but we can only be successful if the working and shopping environment is safe for all."

In May, the woke company's CEO Brian Cornell said he expected theft "will reduce our profitability by more than $500 million compared with last year."

ABC News indicated losses for the company could top $1.2 billion this fiscal year.

The National Retail Federation, the largest trade group for the retail industry, said Tuesday that shrink — a catch-all term for internal and external theft and fraud — cost retailers $112.1 billion in losses last year. In 2021, the cost of shrink was $93.9 billion.

This appears to be an aggressively worsening trend.

"Retailers are seeing unprecedented levels of theft coupled with rampant crime in their stores, and the situation is only becoming more dire," said NRF vice president of asset protection and retail operations David Johnston. "Far beyond the financial impact of these crimes, the violence and concerns over safety continue to be the priority for all retailers, regardless of size or category."

Ever-worsening crime has similarly chased other stores and companies out of Democrat-run cities.

For instance, AT&T announced in June that it would be closing its flagship store in San Francisco — where police have indicated there have been 24,018 reports of larceny theft, 2,039 robberies, 4,186 burglaries, 1,789 assaults, and 40 murders so far this year — citing changing "shopping habits."

TheBlaze previously noted that consumer shopping habits in San Francisco have changed drastically since leftists successfully passed proposition 47 in 2014 — a leftist California ballot initiative that effectively decriminalized thefts under $950.

Cinemark Holdings, Inc. similarly revealed this summer that it too was ditching the crime-ridden and excrement-littered city, shuttering its theater in the downtown Westfield San Francisco Centre mall.

Nordstrom's chief store officer indicated in May it was closing its anchor location in the Westfield mall, citing dramatic changes in the "dynamics of the downtown San Francisco market." Whole Foods also cut and ran.

Crime statistics in neighboring Oakland, which has also done a great job repelling business, paint just as bleak a picture. As of Aug. 27, violent crime was up 19% this year over last year. Robberies are up 30%; rapes, 6%; burglaries, 44%; and motor vehicle thefts, 52%.

Portland too has seen an exodus of business in recent months.

In March, Walmart announced it was closing its last two remaining stores, not long after CEO Doug McMillon warned the company had seen a significant spike in thefts, reported the New York Post.

McMillon told CNBC, "Theft is an issue. It's higher than what it has historically been."

According to the Portland Police Bureau, there were 5,998 burglary, 24,675 larceny offenses, 1,407 robberies, 340 arson, 10,026 assault offenses, and 104 murder reports between August 2022 and August 2023.

Hundreds of businesses, including Starbucks and Nike, have fled Democrat-run Seattle in recent years, again owing to unchecked crime and violence.

So far this year, Seattle had over 25,000 property crimes and 3,470 violent crimes, including 42 murders and 205 rapes, according to the Seattle Police Department crime dashboard.

Police reckon Democratic policies barring judges from jailing or requiring bail for thieves, regardless of how many times the crooks have committed the act, have largely contributed to this problem, reported CNN.

The vast majority of respondents to the NRF's 2023 National Retail Security Survey appeared to agree with this assessment by police, with 72% claiming that they had seen an increase in the average value per incident in localities that raised minimum felony thresholds and another 67% reporting an increase in repeat offenders in geographies where cash bail was reduced or eliminated.

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The Montgomery Brawl Isn’t What Race-Baiting Media Want It To Be

Two viral videos show vigilante justice, which wouldn't be necessary without the left's anti-police, pro-crime rhetoric.

Target drops mask requirements for staff and customers



Retail giant Target has dropped mask requirements for staff and customers, according to NBC News, which reported that the company confirmed to the outlet that the policy took effect Monday.

"As COVID-19 cases continue to decline across the country, Target will not require our U.S. team members or guests to wear masks, as local regulations allow," the company's website states. "We’ll follow all state and local COVID-19 safety regulations and encourage our team members and guests to consult the latest public health guidance, get vaccinated and make decisions to keep themselves and their families safe."

According to NBC News, Target said it will "continue to provide our team with resources and benefits they need, including free medical-grade masks, COVID-19 tests, paid leave for team members with positive COVID-19 cases, and paid time and free Lyft rides to reduce barriers for team members to get their vaccines."

Shoppers who wish to wear a mask may be able to obtain one for free.

"Most CVS Pharmacy locations, including select locations in Target stores, are distributing free N95 masks as part of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' free mask program while supplies last. Customers can request masks at the pharmacy counter and signs will be posted to indicate N95 mask availability," Target's website noted.

The major retail chain's move to dispense with mask requirements comes amid a shift taking place around the country to relax COVID-19 restrictions.

"Hmm. My local Target hasn’t asked customers to wear masks for almost a year now," one person tweeted.

"Haven’t wore a mask in a Target in a year !!!! NBC is way behind the times," someone else tweeted.

Hmm. My local Target hasn\u2019t asked customers to wear masks for almost a year now.
— Andrew Crews (@Andrew Crews) 1645656498

Kurt Vonnegut Makes The Case Against Amazon

Add Kurt Vonnegut's reasons to the pile of why you take the extra time and energy and money to support your local retailer.

Christmas in October: Retailers start early by offering holiday discounts before Halloween

Black Friday is roughly a month away, but the holiday shopping season has already begun. Retailers, such as Best Buy, Macy’s, and Target, are now offering sales on holiday items that normally start on the Friday after Thanksgiving.