Bright Young things not a popular campaing for Victorias Secrets

Victoria secrets campaign of Bright young things
Victoria secrets campaign of Bright young things

Victoria secret has managed to offend all the major groups and this time the parents by having suggestive lines written on the merchandise

Victoria’s Secret has done it again — and it’s turning into a “perfect storm.”

That’s how a spokeswoman for the company described the current imbroglio the lingerie retailer is in over “Bright Young Things,” a spring break-themed tag line for Pink, a brand that was soft-launched in 2002 with the aim of targeting 15- to 22-year-olds.

What’s causing the controversy are the suggestive sayings strewn across the front and back of thongs and bikinis such as “Call Me,” “Wild” and “Feeling Lucky.”

In less than a year, the retail specialist has managed to offend Asian-American groups with its “Sexy Little Geisha” look in September, and Native American groups with a Native American costume that sparked criticism in November. Animal rights activists protested a pair of snake eyes from a taxidermist — which Victoria’s Secret officials said weren’t real — used on a Snake Charmer costume in 2012 in the annual Victoria’s Secret fashion extravaganza.

Now the brand is facing outrage from another facet of society: parents, who believe Victoria’s Secret is targeting teens and tweens.

The company issued a statement saying, “Victoria’s Secret Pink is a brand for college-age women. Despite rumors, we have no plans to introduce a collection for younger women. “Bright Young Things” was a slogan used in conjunction with the college spring break tradition.”

A spokeswoman for Victoria’s Secret who did not want to be named described the anger against the provocative panty line on the Internet — particularly among mommy bloggers — as “confusing.”

“It’s become the perfect storm.…It’s not true.…We are not developing a new product line for younger [teen and tween] women. We have always been focused on college-age women with campus reps that rep the Pink brand, and we have our college licensing program,” said the spokeswoman.

Further explaining that the racy undies were part of an overall Pink collection for spring that was marketed as “Bright Young Things,” the spokeswoman said the panties have been top-selling items.

The parental outcry on the Web began Monday and has become so vehement that a “Victoria’s Secret: Pull Bright Young Things” petition has gone up on Change.org. As of late afternoon Wednesday, the petition had more than 4,300 signatures. Numerous parents also took to the Victoria’s Secret Facebook page to complain, accusing the lingerie giant of “sexualizing our daughters.”

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