FALLEN ANGELS: Victoria's Secret's devolution from an 'an embrace of femininity and beauty' to a WOKE nightmare



The Victoria's Secret annual fashion show used to be a spectacle like no other. People, especially women, waited all year to gawk at the world’s most beautiful supermodels waltzing down the runway adorned in gorgeous sparkling lingerie and enormous angel wings.

But those days, it seems, are long over. In an age when progressivism has swept the country like an insidious plague, Victoria's Secret is now like nearly every other mainstream brand: woke.

Lauren Chen is disappointed to say the least. As someone who used to enjoy watching the fashion show, as it was “an unabashed example of womanhood and femininity,” she’s disheartened to see that the company has conformed to appease the woke crowd.

While Victoria's Secret made an effort several years ago to include plus-size models in its marketing campaigns and in the fashion show, the company was met with criticism because “even those plus-size models were too attractive and not quite diabetic enough,” says Lauren.

Further, the LGBTQ+ community unsurprisingly complained about the “lack of queer and trans inclusivity.”

“Not enough penis on that runway wearing the lingerie,” Lauren quips.

In 2019, the company’s complete 180-degree transformation began when its former chief marketing officer, Ed Razek, came under fire for allegedly “creating a culture of misogyny and harassment in the workplace.” The weight of these allegations against Razek in combination with “increased scrutiny of social justice and feminist activists” was enough to temporarily suspend the fashion show.

The company promised its brief hiatus would allow it to return to the stage “better than ever,” but “that was a total lie,” says Lauren.

The new and “improved” Victoria's Secret that just emerged this past September in the form of a pseudo-documentary called “The Tour” is as woke as it gets.

“Most of the pieces that feature in this film … are not actually lingerie,” critiques Lauren. “Why they decided to not focus on the thing that the brand actually makes is beyond me, but I'm guessing it has something to do with all those allegations of misogyny.”

Further, “the models featured in ‘The Tour’ don't look nearly as sexy or as glamorous as the models that used to walk the Victoria's Secret fashion show.” In fact, they’re very average-looking (and often overweight) people, which might have worked for a company like Dove selling hygiene products, but it certainly is a “180 pivot” for a company like Victoria's Secret.

Even the stereotypical thin, beautiful models included in “The Tour” were not styled to be glamorous or feminine as they were in the past.

“They were trying to make these attractive models look worse for some reason,” says Lauren, “that reason being equity in beauty.”

But that’s only the beginning of the new Victoria's Secret era. Not only has the company replaced the live fashion show with a film, but it also nixed the iconic pop music.

All previous fashion shows featured a famous artist doing a live performance while the models walked the runway. Taylor Swift, Bruno Mars, Ariana Grande, The Weeknd, and Ellie Goulding are just some of the artists who have performed on the Victoria's Secret stage, but this year, the company decided to take a radically different approach.

“Instead they incorporated a poetry recitation from I'm guessing a Nigerian artist,” says Lauren, who found the stunt “awkward and uncomfortable.”

“Victoria's Secret actually took to heart the criticisms of online feminist activists,” says Lauren, and the company created a film that “[checks] all the boxes.”

“It's very diverse, it features different body types, it features different artists from different countries, it's super feminist in that none of the women really look good so you're avoiding the male gaze, [and] it has uncomfortable, weird poetry and art, which, you know, progressives love.”

What could go wrong?

Apparently a lot.

“The Tour” currently “has a 2.9 out of 10 rating on IMDb and a pitiful 1.7 stars on Amazon.”

Those numbers suggest that people “would still rather be entertained than have to sit through essentially an hour of virtue-signaling about how progressive Victoria's Secret as a brand is.”


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Virtue-signaling soccer star Megan Rapinoe — who tells others 'we have to be better' — stereotypes Asians in resurfaced tweet



Ultra-woke soccer star Megan Rapinoe — who once gave a speech saying, "This is my charge to everyone: We have to be better ..." and has virtue-signaled around the globe for progressive causes such as lack of diversity and the evils of white supremacy and former President Donald Trump — actually may be in trouble with cancel culture.

Yup, right after she was chosen as one of seven "women famous for their achievements" who will replace Victoria's Secret supermodel angels, Rapinoe now has a problematic old tweet to deal with.

And in it she stereotypes Asians.

What are the details?

Her tweet from 2011 tells another individual that "u look asian with those closed eyes!"

Image source: Twitter

According to the Sports Room, the account Rapinoe tagged in the tweet — @tasha_kai00, which no longer exists — belonged to former professional soccer player Natasha Kai, who the outlet said is of Hawaiian, Chinese, Filipino, and Caucasian heritage.

Now what?

As of late Thursday afternoon, Rapinoe does not appear to have explained the nature of the tweet to her 923,000-plus Twitter followers. And the tweet itself still was active as of 4:30 p.m.

Given that folks far and wide have been canceled into oblivion for uttering such stereotypical statements, one might guess that Rapinoe could have some cleaning up and 'fessing up to do if she is to survive this. But then again, Rapinoe — who came into prominence after kneeling for the national anthem a la Colin Kaepernick — is a powerful woman with untold numbers of fans and admirers, and she might simply choose to ignore the whole thing.

How are folks reacting?

The tweet is newly resurfaced, so reaction is still pretty fresh, but the tweet is picking up steam — and so are the comments about it. Here's a sampling:

  • "@VictoriasSecret this is your model?" one user asked. "What do you think of this take?"
  • "She is racist," another commenter wrote.
  • "I'm Asian (Chinese to be exact as it clearly makes a difference to people like you)," another user said. "I'd like an explanation for your comment, Ms. Rapinoe. Or, you think we can be blinded with dental floss, too?"
  • "Isn't this the same one who cried about gender equality???" another commenter inquired.
  • "Lmao she's not a right winger. Nothing will happen," another user declared.
  • "the queen of social justice is about to be cancelled herself," another commenter said. "I have no words."

Oh, and here's that speech noted previously in which Rapinoe tells her listeners, "We have to be better":

Soccer player Megan Rapinoe urges crowd at NYC celebration to 'do better'youtu.be

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Victoria's Secret ditches supermodel angels, replaces them with 'women famous for their achievements' including Megan Rapinoe



Victoria's Secret has sent its angels packing in a monumental rebranding that replaces the supermodels with a group of seven "women famous for their achievements," including U.S. soccer star and activist Megan Rapinoe.

What are the details?

The New York Times reported that Victoria's Secret will now be represented by a group called the VS Collective, comprised of "women famous for their achievements and not their proportions."

In addition to Rapinoe, the collective includes 17-year-old Chinese American freestyle skier Eileen Gu, size 14 model "and inclusivity advocate" Paloma Elsessor, Indian actress Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Brazilian trans model Valentino Sampaio, model and South Sudanese refugee Adut Akech, and Amanda de Cadenet, "the photographer and founder of #Girlgaze, the digital platform for female photographers."

Martin Waters, former head of Victoria's Secret's international business and its new CEO as of February, explained to The Times of the company's rebranding, "When the world was changing, we were too slow to respond. We needed to stop being about what men want and to be about what women want."

When the news hit Twitter, people overwhelmingly predicted doom for Victoria's Secret over their decision. "How To Destroy Your Brand 101," one person wrote, with a laughing emoji. Another tweeted, "Hoooboy. RIP @VictoriasSecret." Someone else replied, "reading the tweets seems like vast vast vast majority is hating this decision lol We can add Victoria secret bankruptcy list for 2022."

Although Victoria's Secret had expressed that their aim was to appeal to women, not all women are on board with the new plan.

One woman tweeted, "Men like to look at the Angels. Women hope to look like the angels in the overpriced stuff you sell. Megan Rapinoe has no place in this scenario, ever, at all. Just incredible stuff here."

Another added, "Since they stopped the fashion show they've really just gone downhill on a woke sled and it kind of disheartening. I miss wanting to emulate the angels, the epitome of beauty, not see models that look just like me sitting awkwardly trying to hide their rolls."

But others praised the move, with one person sharing, "I was in a [Victoria's Secret] PINK store the other day and noticed mannequins of different sizes and it was such a comforting change."

Some folks resorted to humor about how the now-fallen "angels" might fare. One person quipped, "At least the models can finally eat a hamburger or something."