Slanbot An Urban Dictoinary للأيفون

صور Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban at Sydney Airport 2024 w,v

Urban Outfitters slammed for tapestry eerily similar to gay uniform in Nazi camps

Urban Outfitters slammed for tapestry eerily similar to gay uniform in Nazi camps

Urban Outfitters tapestry resembles Nazi camp uniform: ADL – NY Daily News

Urban Outfitters under fire for tapestry resembling Nazi concentration camp uniform

The striped tapestry featuring pink triangles is ‘eerily reminiscent’ of those forced upon gay prisoners, the Anti-Defamation League said Monday. The organization’s upset follows the retailer apologizing for a ‘vintage’ Kent State University sweatshirt last fall that appeared splattered with blood.

خليجية
This striped tapestry featuring pink triangles has led to outcry from the Anti-Defamation League after they found it resembled uniforms worn by concentration camp prisoners.

A tapestry resembling uniforms worn by Nazi concentration camp prisoners is drawing outrage from the Anti-Defamation League.

The striped tapestry sold by Urban Outfitters features upside-down pink triangles which are "eerily reminiscent" of those used to identify gay male prisoners in the camps, the organization said Monday.

"Whether intentional or not, this gray and white stripped pattern and pink triangle combination is deeply offensive and should not be mainstreamed into popular culture," said Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the ADL and a Holocaust survivor.

"We urge Urban Outfitters to immediately remove the product eerily reminiscent of clothing forced upon the victims of the Holocaust from their stores and online," he added.

The tapestry appeared absent from the company’s website Monday evening while a "Triangle-Stripe Curtain," with no picture provided, was listed as "sold out."

خليجيةخليجية


The triangle patches were used to identify the reason why the prisoners were at the Nazi camps. One such uniform is seen left.


This isn’t the first time the retailer has come under fire for controversial designs.

Just months earlier the company released a "vintage" Kent State University sweatshirt that appeared splattered with fake blood.

Apparently unbeknownst to the retailer, in 1970 four unarmed college students were shot to death and at least eight others wounded during a rally at the school.

The retailer later apologized for the upset it caused — the university being among those expressing outrage over its design — while defending the design as "part of our sun-faded vintage collection."

خليجية


In 2024 the Anti-Defamation League also criticized the retailer for its sale of a T-shirt featuring a yellow Star of David which Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Europe.

"We find this use of symbolism to be extremely distasteful and offensive, and are outraged that your company would make this product available to your customers," Barry Morrison, ADL regional director, stated at the time.
A request for comment from the retailer was not immediately returned.

Urban Outfitters slammed for tapestry eerily similar to gay uniform in Nazi camps

Urban Outfitters slammed for tapestry eerily similar to gay uniform in Nazi camps

Urban Outfitters tapestry resembles Nazi camp uniform: ADL – NY Daily News

Urban Outfitters under fire for tapestry resembling Nazi concentration camp uniform

The striped tapestry featuring pink triangles is ‘eerily reminiscent’ of those forced upon gay prisoners, the Anti-Defamation League said Monday. The organization’s upset follows the retailer apologizing for a ‘vintage’ Kent State University sweatshirt last fall that appeared splattered with blood.

خليجية
This striped tapestry featuring pink triangles has led to outcry from the Anti-Defamation League after they found it resembled uniforms worn by concentration camp prisoners.

A tapestry resembling uniforms worn by Nazi concentration camp prisoners is drawing outrage from the Anti-Defamation League.

The striped tapestry sold by Urban Outfitters features upside-down pink triangles which are "eerily reminiscent" of those used to identify gay male prisoners in the camps, the organization said Monday.

"Whether intentional or not, this gray and white stripped pattern and pink triangle combination is deeply offensive and should not be mainstreamed into popular culture," said Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the ADL and a Holocaust survivor.

"We urge Urban Outfitters to immediately remove the product eerily reminiscent of clothing forced upon the victims of the Holocaust from their stores and online," he added.

The tapestry appeared absent from the company’s website Monday evening while a "Triangle-Stripe Curtain," with no picture provided, was listed as "sold out."

خليجيةخليجية


The triangle patches were used to identify the reason why the prisoners were at the Nazi camps. One such uniform is seen left.


This isn’t the first time the retailer has come under fire for controversial designs.

Just months earlier the company released a "vintage" Kent State University sweatshirt that appeared splattered with fake blood.

Apparently unbeknownst to the retailer, in 1970 four unarmed college students were shot to death and at least eight others wounded during a rally at the school.

The retailer later apologized for the upset it caused — the university being among those expressing outrage over its design — while defending the design as "part of our sun-faded vintage collection."

خليجية


In 2024 the Anti-Defamation League also criticized the retailer for its sale of a T-shirt featuring a yellow Star of David which Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Europe.

"We find this use of symbolism to be extremely distasteful and offensive, and are outraged that your company would make this product available to your customers," Barry Morrison, ADL regional director, stated at the time.
A request for comment from the retailer was not immediately returned.

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman: CMT Music Awards 2024

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman: CMT Music Awards 2024

Nicole Kidman Supports Keith Urban at CMT Music Awards 2024! | 2024 CMT Music Awards, Keith Urban, Nicole Kidman : Just Jared

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman at the 2014 CMT Music Awards held at the Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday evening (June 4, 2024) in Nashville, Tenn.
FYI: Nicole is wearing a Giambattista Valli dress, Elie Saab shoes, and a Calvin Klein bag.

خليجية

خليجية

خليجية

خليجية

Nicole Kidman Supports Keith Urban at CMT Music Awards 2024! | 2024 CMT Music Awards, Keith Urban, Nicole Kidman : Just Jared

Urban Cowboy: The Rise and Fall of Gilley’s

Urban Cowboy: The Rise and Fall of Gilley’s (on CMT Network June 13th)

set

By Marissa R. Moss June 12,2020

خليجية Debra Winger and John Travolta helped bring country music and western style to the mainstream with 1980’s ‘Urban Cowboy.’ Hulton Archive
Jon Cryer’s iconic Duckie Dale from the Eighties John Hughes classic Pretty in Pink might not seem to have a lot in common with a dancehall on the fringes of Southeast Texas. But you could link one item — that leather-stringed Western bolo tie cinched loosely around Duckie’s neck — directly to a honky-tonk named Gilley’s and the movie that brought western fashion and country music into the mainstream. This year, the 1980 John Travolta film Urban Cowboy celebrates its 35th anniversary and CMT is chronicling the Rise of the Urban Cowboy movement in a time-warping new ********ary.
Urban Cowboy: The Rise and Fall of Gilley’s, premiering on CMT on Saturday, June 13th, at 9:00 p.m., explores the origins of Gilley’s and the implications of how national attention, followed by rampant commercialization, can be a lifetime boon for some — and a downfall for others. Directed by the same team that produces the innovative 30 for 30 series on ESPN, the ********ary features interviews with Gilley, Travolta and others who were integral to the Urban Cowboy scene. It also looks at the real-life "urban cowboys" that inspired the film — most of whom went back to their normal lives on the oil rig while the rest of America became enamored with every stitch on Travolta’s collar and finally welcomed country music into the mainstream.

Based on a 1979 Esquire Magazine story, Urban Cowboy told the tale of a country music love affair between Travolta’s Bud and Debra Winger’s Sissy in the town of Pasadena, Texas. The action was all set in Gilley’s, where real-life "Gilleyrats," as they affectionately named themselves, spent their nights and money dancing, drinking beer and riding the bar’s famed mechanical bull. At the center was singer-pianist Mickey Gilley (a cousin of Jerry Lee Lewis), who invested in the club with his business partner, Sherwood Cryer, when his music career had stalled.
When Urban Cowboy premiered, however, Gilley’s career reignited.
"It launched me into the stratosphere," Gilley tells Rolling Stone Country of Urban Cowboy. Suddenly, the charismatic crooner started logging Number One hits, including "Stand by Me" from the Urban Cowboy soundtrack, which also featured tracks by the Charlie Daniels Band and Kenny Rogers. Like other films whose score spawned a movement (O Brother, Where Art Thou? nudged Americana up the charts), the music and the fashion took on lives of their own.
While the disco aesthetic, the predominant music style at the time, was all about indulging hedonism and dancing your cares away while wearing tight and/or short polyester pieces and towering shoes as painful as they were high, the Wranglers, cowboy boots and leather accessories of Urban Cowboy provided an authentic and all-American alternative. To many, it was a *******ing change.
"I was in an elevator in Nashville one day back in Eighties," recalls Gilley. "There was a guy on there who said, ‘I want to thank you for all you did for Western wear.’ And I said, ‘You need to thank John Travolta. He’s the one who brought it front and center.’ Every night when I go to bed, I thank John Travolta for keeping my career alive."
خليجية

Indeed, the spotlight from Travolta’s Urban Cowboy allowed Gilley to make Gilley’s into a merchandise machine, peddling everything from branded patches to panties, and turning the onetime local honky-tonk into a full-scale cultural temple where wannabe cowboys flocked in their crisp new denim, looking for redemption on the back of its mechanical bull (which, also, was branded and sold). In addition, clothing pieces like the bolo tie and cowboy boots went from being mocked as hillbilly to haute couture. Ralph Lauren collections from the early Eighties boasted thousand-dollar prairie dresses and thick silver belt buckles.

"It was probably my favorite film experience to do as an actor," says Travolta in the ********ary.
Not everyone, however, was thrilled. Actor Barry Corbin, one of the Gilleyrats who also had a role in the film, mourns what the popularity did to the club. "It became something entirely different when that movie came out," he says. "It became a tourist attraction, mecca. All that place was a beer joint, it’s all it was."

As country music began receiving the mainstream attention it had always lacked, Music Row was scrambling to find a way to cater to the rapidly growing audience, attempting to produce more accessible country sounds to match the demand. Johnny Lee’s "Lookin’ for Love," from the soundtrack, was an immediate and huge hit, reaching Number One on the country singles chart, as did other soft-country fare like Gayle’s "Too Many Lovers" and Dolly Parton and Rogers’ "Islands in the Stream." Gilley himself had a string of Number Ones, buoyed by his affiliation with the film.
This popular brand of country music was the perfect balance of what was once dismissed as redneck Americana with a polished pop sensibility. Though their sounds were innately different it’s the exact same pattern that saw Garth Brooks and Shania Twain to the top decades later, and then, Luke Bryan and Taylor Swift.

But fashion is fickle. The diluted country music of Urban Cowboy became a guilty pleasure, and bars across the country eventually ditched their Gilley’s-made bulls, while patrons traded in their cowboy boots for jelly sandals and late-Eighties trends. Gilley’s itself burned to the ground in 1990 in a suspicious fire.
Still Urban Cowboy leftovers remain — like Duckie’s bolo tie. Even today, as Americana music seeps deeper into popular culture, a Western wear aesthetic is seeing a resurgence, with brands like Pendleton Woolen Mills and epic beards appearing everywhere from New York to Paris. There’s even a bed and breakfast in Brooklyn (and, soon, East Nashville) called the Urban Cowboy B&B.
Travolta, too, went out of fashion, until he staged a comeback in 1994’s Pulp Fiction, etching himself once again into the cultural iconography with his Uma Thurman Chuck Berry-boogie dance scene. Around his neck?
A bolo tie.

Read more: Inside Country Music’s Polarizing ‘Urban Cowboy’ Movement | Rolling Stone
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook