Victoria’s Secret: Ex-models make allegations against the lingerie label

Fall of a fashion empire
“My mother didn’t recognize me” – Ex-Victoria’s Secret angels make allegations against the lingerie label

Until 2018, the “Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show” was held annually. The highlight of 2001 was the Fantasy Bra, a jeweled bra worth 2.5 million dollars.

© IMAGO / VCG

The scandals surrounding the former lingerie empire, Victoria’s Secret, are not diminishing. Now two models are making allegations against the lingerie label.

For years, Josephine Skriver and Jasmine Tooker were a cog in the machine Victoria’s Secret empire. Now, four years after the fall of the world’s largest lingerie label, the models have broken their silence on the machinations behind the camera. On the Real Pod podcast with Victoria Garrick, the pair opened up about their experiences as Victoria’s Secret angels and dealt another blow to the brand’s ailing image.

Staged beyond recognition

The fact that an underwear company like Victoria’s Secret uses Photoshop to help with advertising images in order to present their models in their own collections as attractively as possible is nothing new. But Victoria’s Secret is said to have overdone it when reaching into the bag of tricks. As Tookes and Skriver recount, their perfectly staged images were edited beyond recognition at the time, so that they didn’t even recognize themselves.

© IMAGO/UPI Photo

Skriver says, “Sometimes my mother would ask me, ‘Is that you? I didn’t know you could look like that’.” She could have stood next to the billboard for 30 minutes and no one would have recognized her. Tookes also confirms this. Both were signed in 2012 and 2013 – in the time when social media was just experiencing an enormous boom, they say. Fashion show fans have been obsessed with learning more about the infamous Victoria’s Secret angels and knowing every detail of their lives.

Victoria’s Secret Angels: Unattainable Role Models for Many Young Women

Until then, the models had been almost inaccessible to the outside world. Until 2019, they floated down the catwalks of the renowned “Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show” in time for Christmas in the latest bras and panties with oversized wings and were on advertising posters in the world’s metropolises to see. If a model made it to the fashion show, it was considered the elite of the fashion world. It was thus a role model for numerous young women who admired it for its optical perfection and flawlessness and emulated the supposed ideal. And social media brought her one step closer to the lifestyle of the models.

© IMAGO/UPI Photo

“They wanted to know what toothpaste I use,” says Tookes. Fans would still believe her life is “simple” and “perfect”. But Instagram is just a version of herself, she says. “When you see me waking up in the morning at my house, in the middle of the day, all over the baby, no makeup, that’s my real life,” says Tookes, who gave birth to her baby in February.

“You realize that all eyes are on you”

If you come from the fashion world, you know how “fake” everything is. Wear a “costume” of body make-up and get tuned up so much that you don’t resemble yourself anymore. But people still wouldn’t know how strong the staging really is. “It’s so crazy because it’s so obvious to me when I look at old Victoria’s Secret campaigns,” she points out.

When asked if they understood the negative impact their portrayal had on other women and society, Skriver says, “It was a weird time because you realize all eyes are on you.” This would have allowed her to understand the pressure from Victoria’s Secret at the time. But when social media came along, she tried to convey the “glamorous side” she was known for with aspects like “two and a half hours of hair and make-up” and “personal trainer” because of her body and the flawless appearance “It was all hard work. This was obviously not understood at the time. But now – after the company’s realignment and the change in social ideals – you actually have the opportunity to give people realistic insights,” she says.

Ex-Marketing Director: Transgender models and plus-size models have “no place” at Victoria’s Secret

The fact that Victoria’s Secret has come under criticism for its machinations at the time is nothing new. With the spread of the “Body Positivity” and “MeToo” movements, the company has increasingly come into the public eye in recent years – also due to transphobic statements by Marketing Director Ed Razek in 2018, who spoke to the US American ” Vogue” said he doesn’t book transgender models because the show is “a fantasy” in which they “have no place, just like plus-size models”. He caused outrage around the world with this statement, it was the start of the downfall of “Victoria’s Secret”.

Leyna Bloom, who became the first trans woman to appear on the cover of Vogue India, wrote on Instagram at the time: “This is the moment when the masks come off. Now the brand is showing their true colors and their beliefs. They will continue to do so in the future regret when they realize what a mistake they made. When the world has changed and that change is celebrated everywhere, then Victoria’s Secret will not be a part of it. That moment cannot be undone.”

Brand wants to cleanse image

In 2022, the US television service “Hulu” released a documentary about the history of the lingerie company. Under the title “Victoria’s Secret: Angels and Demons” the makers explained in detail about the rise and fall of the label. However, the label now wants to get away from the negative headlines once and for all.

After a four-year break, it replaces its world-famous fashion show with “The Victoria’s Secret Tour” in the form of a film that accompanies 20 international artists and designers from all over the world in the conception of four fashion shows in Bogotá, Lagos, London and Tokyo. It remains to be seen whether the company will be able to heal its broken wings.

Source: “real pod”, “Vogue”, “people”

source site-8