I was just talking to someone about this store. It was pretty popular around the early 2000s along with Hollister. Needed a gas mask and flashlight walking in.
@FIDEL_CASHFLOW_Ай бұрын
Fun fact. People thought that the cologne was pumped in like air and heat are but it was actually the workers spraying it in the air when they thought no one was looking. I rounded a corner and surprised the worker as she was letting off two or three sprays. As soon as she saw me she gave me an awkward smile and shoved the cologne back into her pocket.
@angielott83Ай бұрын
You are not wrong 😂😂😂
@ElvezTorres23Ай бұрын
I’ve learned more about business with your channel than any other sources out there. Great content as always!
@colemc18Ай бұрын
If you want deeper dives, also check out Modern MBA
@SpeakwithTii13 күн бұрын
Here after the CEO's arrest for sex trafficking!
@MusicFromAnotherTimeАй бұрын
The Mad TV sketches about this company were some of the funniest ones back in the day.
@LoveMyUnusualАй бұрын
Ha! I haven't thought about those in a long time. I just re-watched the Christmas photoshoot parody. So stupid, and painfully relevant. 😂
@Cloud1202Ай бұрын
Every day I wake up and rather then look at my own failures, I watch about others.
@CollinMacQuarrieАй бұрын
😹😹😹 Very encouraging
@relicdad88Ай бұрын
I feel ya works out better that way
@marcrugani326Ай бұрын
When living in Honduras, I walked into a mall with a store named "Moose." All the clothing was totally A&F seconds and irregulars with the moose logo on the lapel. They even had the "New York, Est. 1892" on the clothing. I asked an associate working there if they were Abercrombie and Fitch, and they assured me "No, we are a high-quality, independent retailer."
@slyfox2022Ай бұрын
With a straight face too? Damn
@MikeHunt-ei5gbАй бұрын
2000-2012 Abercrombie was the wildest place to go shopping
@TheProtagonistDiesАй бұрын
the fact you actually wore this...
@HomeWrecknKneeKnockrАй бұрын
@@TheProtagonistDies better quality than what u wear i bet
@RF-vg5kvАй бұрын
I actually still wear some things from A&F. The quality isn’t as great as it used to be though in my opinion i still have some cargo shorts and hoodies from at least 2008 or so that I still wear and they still are in good shape .
@JoJoJokerАй бұрын
@9:30 “Wong’s Dry Cleaning. Two Wongs Can Make it White.” My classmate had that shirt in 2002
@Lateralus1007Ай бұрын
I need it
@kenmore01Ай бұрын
Also, three lefts make a right.
@frankjoyce76Ай бұрын
I would buy this shirt today ❤
@PrincessofPower84Ай бұрын
@@frankjoyce76weird flex but ok
@GuessTheSongMSАй бұрын
I’m Asian and I want it too. If you can’t laugh at yourself, you are missing out on the cosmic joke.
@juliac6256Ай бұрын
aeropostle, hollister, and abercrombie were THE brands in middle school where i lived
@aaronlimitlessАй бұрын
I think for a lot of people aero only became popular because it was so much cheaper than Hollister Abercrombie and even American Eagle and it was the people that really couldn’t afford to buy Abercrombie or Hollister or couldn’t buy a lot of it would go to aero in our area definitely had an image that it was for poor people
@marcjohn9404Ай бұрын
One of the things I most fondly remember going to the mall in the 2000s is the dimly lit A&F stores, with the smell of Fierce (their men's cologne) pumped out into the halls. That was their calling card back in the day.
@BraydenBunch58Ай бұрын
They basically went from Hooters like advertising, To any other clothes store.
@sor3999Ай бұрын
It's weird they are singled out for their targeted marketing when most other stores do some level of that.
@gkaradimasАй бұрын
Growing up in the late 90s, A+F was a staple brand. Quite literally everyone wore it. Since I wore a lot, I decided to get a job there. I worked at two separate stores throughout high school. I should note, however that this was BEFORE they started putting half naked guys in front of the store. I had graduated before all that. However, I had an opportunity in college to work for the Home Office, located in New Albany, OH. I was an “A+F Front Desk Guy” (yes we wore clothes and actually sat at a desk lol) and had a really great experience working there. Met a lot of cool folks, attended some great events, and enjoyed my time there. Their offices had an outdoorsy college campus kinda vibe, and it really was unique for its time. Looking back however, we were sort of brainwashed into the brand and “image” of the brand. At the time, it just seemed like we a part of soem fun and cool. Of course, now I look back and cringe at how exclusive the brand had become. Overall, I’m happy to have been a part of it in the capacity I did, however I am grateful that I moved away from it and grew out of it when I did.
@AgoPressАй бұрын
I liked the old A&F more!!!
@DMaster81Ай бұрын
Maybe it’s just the nostalgia of being in high school and college in the late 90s early 2000s, but I miss Abercrombie.
@Sambam1981Ай бұрын
Those were the times
@KeiAngelusАй бұрын
I guess A&F will become the SEARs for millennials when they get older
@TheCrazierzАй бұрын
And not filtch?
@happypants19851Ай бұрын
@@KeiAngelusthat’s a very good comparison.
@Andrew-ps6xeАй бұрын
It was always amusing to read old market hunting era stories that mention getting equipment from Abercrombie & Fitch, then harvesting hundreds of game animals a day just 5 miles away in Newark. Today it reads like buying guns from H&M in San Francisco to go hunting in downtown Oakland.
@MrPh30Ай бұрын
@@Andrew-ps6xe the M in HM is actually Mauritz ( Widforrs ) , and that is their sister firm owned by same family and is one of Scandinavia biggest hunting and clothing shops . So what AF was , M is .
@adam5599Ай бұрын
That's not so crazy to go hunting in downtown Oakland. Lot of animals there
@JordantmoriАй бұрын
I worked at Abercrombie for a few years around 2012. Was honestly a ton of fun and i still am in contact with friends i made working there. The company needed to change but boy was working there at that time an experience that is impossible to recreate in today’s age.
@brittneybabeee4031Ай бұрын
Overall there’s sooo much from like ‘98 to ‘12 that you simply can’t understand if you weren’t there & more depressingly, we’ll never be able to recreate. :(
@ckfinke7625Ай бұрын
I love it when this is mentioned in the song "Summer Girls" by LFO ("I like girls that wear Abercrombie & Fitch").
@jimv77Ай бұрын
That LFO Boy Band sure is cursed.....
@mjrodriguez8670Ай бұрын
That song was released before the end of the 20th Century.
@Marvin.45Ай бұрын
This song what comes to mind when hearing a f.
@Marvin.45Ай бұрын
Do you remember Eminems comeback? 😂😂
@stuffingtonjfluffypantsiiiАй бұрын
Thats I=it! that's song I was thinking of. I was thinking "I never even heard of this brand until some song in the early 2000s took over radio rotations.
@jimmyispromoАй бұрын
Brought back my college days. I worked there so i could meet hundred people immediately. Super fun group and held bar crawls almost every month. Best college job, nothing beyond that.
@Markimark151Ай бұрын
Abercrombie and Fitch was really popular when I was in college and then they went out of style, they discriminate against hiring older people. That location closed down and then they reopened in the mall just several years later, with older employees and brighter lighting.
@joesmith-em2cdАй бұрын
Wasn’t Hollister the same?
@Markimark151Ай бұрын
@@joesmith-em2cd Hollister has a different image from A&F, and they have separate customers.
@BigPurp9Ай бұрын
When I was in high school any hot girl wasn’t verified hot if she hadn’t been stopped in the mall and offered a job at Hollister. That stuff was like a Michelin star verification back then 😂
@leigha2814Ай бұрын
@@Markimark151that cannot be true. The only people who wear A&F or Hollister are white upper middle class teens and college kids. What's the difference?
@sor3999Ай бұрын
Every clothing store discriminates against old people, if it is a youth brand, and even gender.
@FoxonianАй бұрын
A & F used to be the Cabella's of their day.
@qazhrАй бұрын
More bass pro shop
@jenniferroney6593Ай бұрын
@@qazhr cabellas is owned by bass pro
@qazhrАй бұрын
@@jenniferroney6593 true but the front name is bass
@ffeonaАй бұрын
When I was a teenager it was cool to wear Aeropostale, not A&F. I always thought it was weird how dark and empty it was in our A&F, but the Aeropostale was bright and full of customer's, which was directly across from each other
@DrTopLiftDPTАй бұрын
Aeropostale was for the poor kids when I was in school in early 2000s
@aaronlimitlessАй бұрын
@@DrTopLiftDPT same hair pastel was if you couldn’t afford American Eagle or Hollister or Abercrombie it was fine to do Abercrombie and Hollister although Hollister was seen as slightly cheaper American Eagle. You can get away with their jeans and stuff like that as long as they didn’t have the logos, but it still never looked quite as nice as Hollister and Abercrombie and aero pastel looks in quality wise always felt like an H&M and forever 21. There is definitely a difference in quality.
@1903txАй бұрын
I bought some cargo shorts there in the early 2000s that were incredibly well-constructed. They were far more durable than the ACU cargo pants I was issued in the army. I went back a few years later and the quality was crap.
@dasrit3Ай бұрын
I used to buy from there too, the quality was good and the clothes fit well but after checking recently, it seems that they deliberately sell ill-fitting cuts. The quality was also worse too, I'm surprised they're apparently doing better.
@ryanjohnson4565Ай бұрын
Yep. Exactly. And man. Those cargo shorts were huge enough to completely conceal a full size Arizona tea can on the way into the dollar theater. With tons of other candy.
@antwanjones6048Ай бұрын
I embarrassingly bought so much A&F this summer that I feel like I'm reliving my childhood, but the new threads are eye-catching and comfortable. This video is very timely for this company's latest reincarnation.
@Scotty_in_OhioАй бұрын
I bought some last year - some of the items labeled "vintage" or "retro" on the site - they were cheaper and the cut (jeans) were what I was looking for. The quality is pretty decent (they hold up to daily wear and daily washings). I sell to A&F so while it's not required or really expected it's sort of courtesy that you wear a few of their products when you vist.
@raviamodernepicАй бұрын
I worked there in 2007 in the stock room 😑 the restock manager bullied people into doing chew, so that should tell you enough about company culture back then.
@chriskay1449Ай бұрын
NICe broadabrushing. One manager does not define the entire company.
@raviamodernepicАй бұрын
Want me to point you to the lawsuits instead? 🙄
@OldPirate1718Ай бұрын
@@raviamodernepicsure...point away
@raviamodernepicАй бұрын
Not wasting my time helping Internet randos find the obvious
@drinkinouttacups2665Ай бұрын
@@OldPirate1718 lmao like there's lawsuits about ...chewing tobacco?
@anthonybertone2336Ай бұрын
Well, I’ve heard of them. I have never been there and I sure do. Enjoy my educational Wednesdays with a company man. Thank you.
@randomgirl2994Ай бұрын
Interesting to know Abercrombie & Fitch goes back to the 1800s! The biggest thing that always deterred me from shopping there was the low lights and massive perfume use. Perfume because I'm allergic (thus, natural deterrent for me lol) and low lights because I didn't feel safe nor comfortable shopping there. So I opted for one of their competitors who see to be brighter, more friendly, genuine, and inclusive. If it's not already on your list, will you please consider doing a video about American Eagle and its sister women's apparel store Aerie? Thank you for your time to make these videos
@ARentz07Ай бұрын
I was in high school at the height of Abercrombie popularity. It's the one "preppy" brand I never wore. I had American Eagle, Aeropostale, and Hollister, but never A&F. It just seemed a little too pretentious even to my simple high school brain. Looking back, all those brands seem very similar, and I view them as a relic of the 2000's.
@Dallasrocker124Ай бұрын
I always perk up/take a shot whenever companyman mentions Dallas the city I live in
@ctrain1983Ай бұрын
Same.. I'm in Fort Worth
@indalecio539Ай бұрын
All the cool kids in school wore A&F. I was so envious of them.
@fatuusdottoreАй бұрын
It's okay. You aren't there anymore.
@gm12551Ай бұрын
Don’t worry some of those cool jocks are now bald.
@juicybullfrogАй бұрын
Same with American Eagle outfit. All the cool christians kids were wearing it and I was kinda envious not having one.
@EstoNoEsUnSpoilerАй бұрын
If you were in high school in the early/mid-2000s A&F was the paramount brand for that kind of douchy posh person. Outside the US it was seen as very aspirational, as, at the time there were few or no international stores and people wearing the brand demonstrated the purchasing power to travel abroad. Their notorious marketing and the cloying scent of Fierce... the dark stores and the thicker paper of the shopping bags and receipts. The mark of an era.
@opraiderman904Ай бұрын
I passed a store recently and realized how different it was, they were definitely an experience then and MUCH less cool now.
@aaronlimitlessАй бұрын
Some of the stores are pretty nice but it’s honestly I get they want to change it up, but their stores feel much more similar to most stores now versus back in the day. Abercrombie and Hollister felt so high-end even if you go to an older style one now it still feels very modern. They really were decades ahead of the style. It’s funny seeing all that gray black and white all over Abercrombie back in the 2000s and recently in the last couple years literally everything is green and white and peoples homes they really were ahead of the trend. I missed that styleI like the mysterious allure of their stores.
@AbstractDivinity113 күн бұрын
I'm a black man and used to work for Hollister and Abercrombie & Fitch when I was in my mid 20's. Working there was strict and the pay was low. They had what was called the look policy. Males had to shave their face, and females had to remove nail polish and use light makeup. They only allow workers to wear Vans, and chuck taylor converse in white, blue and red. New employees work 2x per week and if the mangers like you, they'll add more hours. Race plays a role. White workers were more prilvaged especially if the are exotic looking. Things has changed since I left. Guys can now grow facial hair and the store now sell black clothes, only colour they never had.
@WordSarien27 күн бұрын
Honestly, the only thing I associate with Abercrombie & Fitch was the scandal that they apparently would rather burn unsold merchandise rather than donate it so that no one who didn't fit their image would wear it. This was years ago and I can't find a source to back it up, so I don't know if it's true, but of course it affected my perception of them. (Admittedly, I know next to nothing about fashion.) Aside from that, I remember occasionally seeing the logo at high school and the like, and that's about it. Back then, I actually assumed A&F (and other brands like them) must be cheaper clothing, because I thought wearing shirts with logos looked tacky, and "obviously" the only reason to wear it was because it was cheaper. I still can't quite wrap my head around paying extra for the "privilege" of giving a company free advertising.
@COMPFUNK2Ай бұрын
I remember when Mike Jeffries said that A&F was only for good looking people. I hadn’t seen him before at that point; but when I did, I and a lot of other people were like, “THAT guy?”
@stflawАй бұрын
9:30: To correct the record, Abercrombie addressed the protests over the offensive depiction of Asians on t-shirts by stating, "We're velly, velly, velly solly." Needless to say, this did not calm the situation.
@ashleyswshrАй бұрын
I will buy their older sweaters secondhand. They actually did manufacture some good quality clothing. Nothing with the big logo on it though. Tacky
@bloqk16Ай бұрын
Well, I'm from the generation that's familiar with the A&F during its outdoors/sporting goods era. The retailer got a lot of marketing publicity from the movie: "Man's Favorite Sport," from 1964, starring Rock Hudson and Paula Prentiss. Hudson's character is a proficient sales person for A&F, specializing in fishing gear. Yet, the character himself was an inexperienced fisherman.
@getgot7461Ай бұрын
That's interesting, thanks for sharing
@graemefoster7805Ай бұрын
Great video, thanks man
@cletus223Ай бұрын
I remember hating the kids in junior high school that wore Abercrombie & Fitch, I thought of them as preppy and too good for everyone else.
@momomon7662Ай бұрын
Letsss gooo, I was hoping you'd make a video on them!!!
@TVandMangaАй бұрын
Brilliant video, really interesting.
@tarrabaronАй бұрын
My son loved shopping here when he was 5-7 years old. His older cousins loved this store so he did what they did! Once they grew out of it he was done. Interesting fact they didn’t sell black clothes in the 90’s. I interviewed at this store in the 90’s I wasn’t hired because I wore black to the interview. I worked in another store and had that store clothing on for my before work interview.
@RT-qd8ylАй бұрын
Why was that?
@2005JoinDateАй бұрын
@@RT-qd8yl For preppies, navy blue is your black. Unspoken rule
@gkaradimasАй бұрын
@@RT-qd8ylMike Jeffries hated the color black, so it was never sold in stores.
@fredgarvin716Ай бұрын
I'm in my 50s and work with a lot of people under 30. Believe me, there is still a "cool group" and they all strive to be in it. It might not center around fashion anymore but it's still there.
@babyswheels54Ай бұрын
Being from NYC back in the day I’d see A@F downtown and through I never shopped there, I kinda knew it was another of those upscale shops that dotted midtown. Thanks for the video as I learned a lot about the place and now I know that this shop wouldn’t be for me. Good job!
@chriskay1449Ай бұрын
You forgot to mention the song "Summer Girls" by LFO. That hit song gave A&F a lot of free marketing.
@TECfan129 күн бұрын
I never shopped there as a teenager but I do remember that iconic night club look to the store when Id go shopping. I remember this rich girl in my high school kept a shopping bag from there with the topless male model and would bring it to school using it as her lunch bag, lmao. I actually recently stopped by the store and was pleasantly surprised to see that it has been completely transformed to appeal more to millennials in their 20s and 30s with some cool classic offerings. Its like H&M with better quality items. I like the more subtle look and have recently enjoyed shopping there, picking up a few nice shirts and jeans.
@ilovemoms538513 күн бұрын
Got some news for you…
@jg55754Ай бұрын
Never heard of this company growing up. Recently started shopping there as someone with little taste in fashion but who enjoys simple clothing made with reasonably solid materials. Been happy with most items and get compliments on them often.
@robertmittoniii5427Ай бұрын
I have a friend who is a sweet down to earth young woman. She explained to me once that she was a pretty toxic person in high school and college. (Think Regina George from mean girls). She explained how throughout this period she worked at A&F and like they kinda pressured her to maintain that personality at work. Things like flirt with unattractive or overweight guys who were shopping to try to get them to leave the store as quickly as possible. She said that like they made interviewing potential employees get stared down and then graded their attractiveness. She said that store management directly contributed to her eating disorder at the time. Like the company had a real tangible effect on her developing a mental health issue.
@JStorm13Ай бұрын
You can always tell where one was with their front of store format
@thepulp80sАй бұрын
I’m a millennial and never shopped at AF, never really knew what it was. Recently I saw some of their stuff and tried it out myself. Very glad I did. They make awesome stuff now
@averagewhiteguy2Ай бұрын
It feels weird to require higher diversity in advertisement as something court ordered, and I disagree with it. For advertising at least, you should be able to hire people to model based on any and all kinds of looks, including race.
@originaozzАй бұрын
I don't totally disagree, but the way they say it sure makes the brand sound like something class A jerks & high school bullies would wear. They gotta accept the hate.🤷♀️
@dianaberlin4767Ай бұрын
Sure. But than get ready to get cancelled fast 🤷🏻♀️👋🏼
@GrannyHatesEdithe15 күн бұрын
I had to rewind for the 5th reason, first time I heard it thought you said sandals not scandal 😂 great coverage as always 🤙
@SuperYovaАй бұрын
The East Coast/ Ivy League look is timeless, and as a college student in the 1990s, they nailed it; if you could afford it you probably wore it.
@davesmilie3082Ай бұрын
Anyone who has ever been to the town of Hollister would never wear clothing that advertised that town.
@gtothee5723Ай бұрын
As a child, I was fortunate enough that our family liked to shop at A&F. Still have some clothes from that era, and the quality used to be leagues better than anything offered today.
@aaron74Ай бұрын
In the late 1980s and very early 1990s, I remember the stores had plaid carpeting, hanging chandeliers of antlers, and doors and walkway openings of dark-stained wood with lancet arches. It really exuded New England prep school golf course pro shop vibes. The whole place smelled strongly of their fragrance, of course, too.
@allanvanuga9196Ай бұрын
Great video.
@zekewalker1350Ай бұрын
Gotta tell you I literally got an Abercrombie ad in the middle of this video. The ad was for their new collaboration with the NFL. The marketing is still focused on young people and honestly still looks pretty preppy, it just looks like preppy streetwear
@brosch91Ай бұрын
I wore a lot of Ambercrombie & Fitch, American Eagle, and Pacsun clothes back in Jr High and High school. (which was from 2004-2009, when a lot of people still frequented malls) The shirts from A&F and Pacsun were my favorite, very comfortable and were designed to a hot environment, which I preferred because I used to get overheated easily. American Eagle had the best Jeans, though and that's where I'd get them. Sadly, Pacsun and A&F are both long gone in our indoor mall here in my hometown and only American Eagle remains. My dad introduced me to Rue 21 during my last senior year of high school and I started using their black and carbon cologne. Still one of my favorite smells to this day! Sadly their store also closed in the mall after they recently filed for bankruptcy.
@jerranspearman3369Ай бұрын
good video
@WMTSmileyАй бұрын
We’ve all been wanting this and it’s the top suggestion: The Decline of MySpace Also I’d like to see Walmart and Hastings Books.
@georgehernandez9767Ай бұрын
I remember when Hollister was making the rounds within apparel back when I was in junior high school. I never appreciated the brand, but I enjoyed some of the music selection and fragrances when occasionally entering the stores.
@prettypic444Ай бұрын
my family always laughs whenever we walk past a Hollister- Hollister California is nowhere near the beach! Still feel the need to sneeze whenever I walk past an Abercrombie too!
@atheistpower5659Ай бұрын
I found out about this company not from shopping for clothing at their stores but from Mad-TV skits in the 90s .
@ckfinke7625Ай бұрын
Cannot wait for "The rise and fall...and rise again" of General Motors.
@Scotty_in_OhioАй бұрын
add a few more rise and falls in the title ;-)
@colormeinkedАй бұрын
I’m glad Company Man said it. As a young black kid who wasn’t the thinnest in high school, I always felt as though A&F was geared towards thin, white, young people. I only shopped at Aeropostale. I never stepped foot in an A&F, I always felt like I wouldn’t belong there and quite honestly, I wasn’t jealous of the kids who sported their apparel.
@TheNewgreatlifeАй бұрын
Aero was my go-to in high school also. How you described feeling about A&F is how I mostly also felt about American Eagle and Hollister at the time.
@colormeinkedАй бұрын
@@TheNewgreatlife I have to agree with you. AE and Hollister were the same to me too. Aero felt the most inclusive. I stepped foot in AE once and couldn’t find anything in my size. I said I wasn’t the thinnest, not because I was overweight, I was quite thin, but not a size zero. I couldn’t find a damn thing in that store that I could fit and just left. Hollister, never stepped foot in one either. I didn’t feel as though I fit that “beachy” aesthetic either. I applied for a job 80,000 times at Aero, though, and never got as much as a call. Applied at a lot of other stores in the mall and got calls and interviews coming out the wazoo. It was quite interesting.
@tanyapollar393114 күн бұрын
I loved the kid store. All my kids wore it from 2000- 2013 but by then my kids loved forever 21, Charlotte rouge and some H&M. They were in high school now they are grown. But I did go back to there kids store for my stepdaughter and still love it to this day.
@NikpredmiАй бұрын
Their vintage inspired shirts and blank shirts are some of the best i have ever wore!
@Endor2001Ай бұрын
There is absolutely NOTHING wrong with a store wanting to advertise to a certain clientele.
@aaron74Ай бұрын
You probably wouldn't want to be in a shopping mall in that case
@sor3999Ай бұрын
It's weird they were singled out for something that's common in the clothing industry. Probably a media hit by competitors since they were a market leader in those 2 decades.
@StewartMathАй бұрын
Go watch the documentary hah.
@jeffslote9671Ай бұрын
The CEO was marketing to people he saw as potential victims. The marketing was dominated by his fetishes
@Law0086Ай бұрын
Actually, there are laws in certain industries that forbade that. Especially to children. Clothing never seems to get touched.
@russypАй бұрын
Stopped there once in high school looking for a black and white striped shirt. The atmosphere was exactly as you described. The associate told us they didn’t sell anything black.
@codymarshall4622Ай бұрын
I worked as a Front Desk guy at A&F's home office for a couple summers in college. We were the test subjects for the new outfits the floor models would wear in the stores. Dress code was pretty strict then. Mike Jefferies required we all say "Good morning, Mike" each morning as he walked in.
@Scotty_in_OhioАй бұрын
As someone who sells to A&F I know that they've changed a lot in the past 20 years - they've become very successful around on-line retailing - the do as the video pointed out attempt to ride trends and start them. If you have a "dad bod" body type you'll need to add at least a size (maybe two) unless you like a tight fitting garment. I don't have personal experience with lots of their clothes but the jeans seem to hold up well but not unlike other more fashionable brands the room in the pockets (even for guy jeans) is sparce, t-shirts seem to hold up for a long time - they're soft and not too thin...
@shmookinsАй бұрын
Not mentioned here but worth noticing is how the value/stock was falling then a new CEO came and drastically switched thing around. She made the stock value grow faster than Nvidia. I love it when new management comes and drastically makes things better. Impressive skills, indeed.
@weeabooperАй бұрын
Back in high school my friend got approached by a talent scout when we were shopping there to model for them but we were fourteen at the time so they told her to come back in TWO YEARS. In hindsight, I've never been able to get over how slimy their marketing felt because of how young the models they were willing to recruit could get and it really alienated me from the brand even though they rebranded. Also given who the former ceo of L brands had connections with, it makes the thought significantly worse ☹️
@CiaoRoosterАй бұрын
I was in college when A&F Quarterly first dropped. It was a sensation. Previously, we had only had the J. Crew catalogue to look forward to. I even wrote a term paper about it for a sociology course I took. I actually analyzed the photos to see how often a model was topless and how often they were bottomless. I don’t have my stats on hand, but I would say that around 10% of models were both, meaning the lacked a shirt and pants or a skirt. But none were “nude” per se. They most you saw was a naked butt. I always found it interesting that you would have models that weren’t even wearing the clothes. The clothes themselves were always feature on a crisp white page, neatly folded, very similar to J. Crew. I recently learned that virtually the entire staff of the magazine were young gay men, who without significant oversight were intentionally pushing boundaries, showing men in “homosocial” situations, but really they were trying to be as homoerotic as possible. The creative style was actually based off of the photographs of Bruce Weber, himself now known to be a very controversial figure who was known to be engaged in some recurrent inappropriate workplace behavior.
@-scgg-gg7938Ай бұрын
Great video
@danielucha1310Ай бұрын
I remember that Jersey Shore dude with the abs who got practically a cease and desist order from A&F to stop wearing the brand on the show.
@0x13horizon4Ай бұрын
My bf and I consistently visit Abercrombie during our mall visits. Malls in the Dallas area are thriving businesses which maybe you should look into because it really makes me forget how malls are declining most everywhere else. Anyways we go because of the clothing quality, they have a fantastic men’s selection especially
@MikeFrankovichАй бұрын
In the eighties my stepfather used to shop at their store in the Beverly Center mall in Los Angeles. Back then it was more for older gentlemen with money and obviously not what it became later. One time I saw Vincent Price shopping there. When I started seeing younger people wearing their clothes in the nineties I was wondering why they were wearing such an old person brand.
@dunnowy123Ай бұрын
I associate Abercrombie & Fitch with the 2000s. It's a nostalgic store for me; I'm happy that the brand pivoted and came back with a new philosophy and look. It's a success that should be studied.
@terri_blueberriАй бұрын
I loved A&F. I'm glad they're making a comeback. I miss the old marketing though, when it had personality and edge and ego, versus now it feels gentrified and mid. I think their clothes quality took a hit for a while, but seems better now. Better than the disposable junk like H&M or Forever 21 or Shein and other fast fashion garbage. I mean, it's not super great, but it is much better than most of their competition.
@sams3015Ай бұрын
When I was in my teens in Celtic Tiger Ireland (economic boom between 1997-2007) it was seen as proof as you went to US so it was extremely popular. I remember being excited a store opened in London & Paris but it definitely took some of prestige away lol
@dwood78part23Ай бұрын
This is my 1st time hearing about this store. It's good to see them turn it around.
@TheNewgreatlifeАй бұрын
OMG are you for real!????? You must never have been much of a mall person I'm assuming?
@carlosaturciosАй бұрын
Thank you for covering them! I worked for Abercrombie from 2008-2014 and I have so many stories of the wild stuff I would oversee/hear and the creepy over-sexualization of employees. Definitely had several coworkers I became friends with over the years that developed a body complex from the toxic environment it created. I remember how much I used to loathe being the “greeting model” when people walked in and having to repeat the same dumb taglines over and over. I stayed because I loved the people I worked with, was pretty queer friendly, and flexible with school. However anyone above a District Manager were definitely drinking the Kool-Aid and perpetuating a fat-shaming atmosphere.
@andrewbuhman1066Ай бұрын
I visited A&F in the '90s. My ears are still ringing...
@DexterHeisenbergBruhАй бұрын
The Abercrombie and Fitch sketches on MadTV were absolutely hilarious.
@christopherfeatherleyАй бұрын
I was always curious why they didn't rebrand Abercrombie & Fitch to simply "Abercrombie", since that's generally what the public call it, and it would be easier on the logo. I had no idea the founder (Abercrombie) left and Fitch carried thr company! The brand Fitch definitely doesn't sound right 😅
@Sasi-ex5ynАй бұрын
As a European, I never heard about anyone of these companies you are mentioning recently... It's cool! I recommend you a Vivendi Games history, or a FOX history, or a Ted Turner history.
@Rockhead84Ай бұрын
A buddy of mine worked there during college at the New Albany, OH headquarters. I went to visit him there for lunch one day and he met me on a Razer scooter (everyone used these around the campus). Walked through design areas and saw models there. It was...interesting lol.
@jackielinde7568Ай бұрын
Abercrombie & Fitch sounds like some undead horror... Because IT! WON'T! JUST! DIE! ALREADY! To be fair, I've never shopped there. I was young and thin back then, but the store was clearly not marketed to someone like me. Also, I didn't have A&F clothing money, and I have NEVER been in the Cool Kids Club. (I was and still am the polar opposite as a D&D, Marching Band, Nerd/Geek/Dork/Dweeb.)
@UrbanExploring1980Ай бұрын
My first job was hollister at my local mall, nice to see them doing well
@kentonbrewer3232Ай бұрын
I would love to see a video about Western Auto and what happened to that company. I know they were a leading auto parts store in the 80s and 90s and seemingly vanished. I was born in 97 and i can't even remember seeing one or going to one. It just seems like their downfall seemed to happen so quickly. I would love to know more about the story of it!
@hotwax9376Ай бұрын
As someone who's mildly nerdy and was proud to buck the "in-crowd" in middle and high school, I was never into A&F, even though a lot of my classmates wore it and I thought some of their clothing looked good. Fortunately, my middle and high school classes never had any strong caste system and everybody was pretty accepting of anybody else. And I agree that they got a lot of backlash over the "we only want cool, hip kids" comment; a lot of their consumer base that liked to wear hip fashion but didn't support exclusion refused to shop there after that. I also remember my (now deceased) gma singling out both A&F and Calvin Klein as clothing brands whose sexualized advertising she disliked, and I can't say I ever disagreed.
@lpnp9477Ай бұрын
To an extent i appreciated the male sexualization in their ads. I am a straight male, but i am for sexualizing men more rather than sexualizing no one at all. We shouldnt be afraid or ashamed of sex, we should just be more equatable about it. Straight women and gay men appreciate eye candy too. Its kind of sad that this formerly enormous vector for male sexualization is just lost now.
@sor3999Ай бұрын
Whether due to nature or nurture, women are just not as visual about sex as men are. For gay men yes because they are still men and are wired to seek out visual stimulus. What is weird is that it's not like women don't discriminate on looks. But even in private they don't seek out male eye candy. My Instagram is full of thirst traps while my female friends do not follow any male models.
@wenkrushАй бұрын
I didn't know about their history as an outdoors store. They weren't on my radar until high school in the mid-late 90s. It's interesting that they have been able to make a comeback recently when stores like GAP and Banana Republic have closed 300 or so stores in the last couple years.
@itzAsianFoolАй бұрын
My friend put it in words well. He said that Abercrombie rebranded to be a step higher than fast fashion for a more posh market but not intrude into the more high end like Ralph Lauren and Lacoste .
@spencerdokes6056Ай бұрын
I like girls that wear Abercrombie and Fitch
@RabbitWatchShopАй бұрын
creepy comment
@CollinMacQuarrieАй бұрын
@@RabbitWatchShopit’s a song by LFO (“Summer Girls”).
@RabbitWatchShopАй бұрын
@@CollinMacQuarrie oh 😕
@tukuhnikivatsАй бұрын
A&F torched for "exclusionary" marketing. Meanwhile at FUBU...
@bbkangsАй бұрын
For Us By Us 😂
@blakelyhall8191Ай бұрын
Sure sure, but having exclusionary hiring practices and selling racism on t-shirts is okay?
@emilyadams3228Ай бұрын
@@blakelyhall8191 It's fuckin great.
@stickyoxtailАй бұрын
@@emilyadams3228why pick fight with Asians tho? Curious
@sor3999Ай бұрын
It's weird they are singled out for a very common clothing industry practice. Certain brands want a certain image. And this still happens to this day. You want generic go to Old Navy or something.
@maitaniyamaАй бұрын
One of the reasons I bought from them was just the quality of their clothes. I’ve got shirts from the mid 2000s that are still going strong and their jeans were soft and most of the cuts fit me (though I vividly remember a super skinny one not going over my heel😂). I’m Asian and short, so most stores’ petites still bagged at my ankles but theirs didn’t. I do like their overall though. I can actually see what I’m buying and I while mahogany and flannel smell is nice they kind went overboard.