Signatures 2651 total
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Name: Lindsey B on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Kripa Patwardhan on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Carrie Cox on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Are you FREAKIN KIDDING ME?!?!?! Get your heads out of your asses and stop asking my daughter for a picture of hers!Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Natalia Ortega on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Stop this ridiculous campaign. Shame on you!Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Lisa A. Wood on Feb 11, 2010Comments: This is the most ridiculous campaign I have ever heard! And we wonder why so many young women grow up to believe there bodies are worth no more than what a man leaves on the nightstand the night before if anything.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Behn Fannin on Feb 11, 2010Comments: As if young women don't have enough pressures revolving around body issues. Ridiculous. At the VERY LEAST take away the rating and comment system which is sure to leave many girls feeling terrible about their appearance. You know how people on the internet are, right? They say horrible things about people because they are anonymous, and can be detached and easily irresponsible for their words. As adults we can accept this fact, and though it may hurt us on some level, we understand that people can be jerks. Unfortunately young girls will not as easily accept this notion, and will take it much more to heart than you or I would. If you let this campaign run, consider me a lost customer, and I will certainly encourage all my friends, hipster or not, to do the same. Thank you for your time.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments: You have got to be kidding me! This is the most irresponsible marketing gimmick. Please stop using women as tools. Your company formerly was rather unique in the way it used regular people as models and not photoshopped perfection. I also admired that you used American factories. I am very disappointed in this hideous campaign.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Ashley Carpenter on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Rachel Synnott on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments: I would NEVER wear your apparel. This campaign is horrific. Where is your pride?Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: CanadaFlag
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Name: Vicki Holdaway on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Melissa Atwell on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Daniele Paquette on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: CanadaFlag
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Name: John Carruthers on Feb 11, 2010Comments: I have three young children -- two of whom are girls -- and none of whom will ever wear AA again.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Beth on Feb 11, 2010Comments: American Apparel, you lost yourself a customer. (And my ass is gorgeous!!!)Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Jennifer M Bantel on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Elizabeth Blanchard on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Jennifer Glasgow on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Lindsay Tolle on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Dear American Apparel -- This is yet another stumble in your shady business practices. The exploits of your CEO in New York have been well documented, and I won't repeat them here, but it is time you reversed your official attitudes toward women and made it as much of a priority as your commitment to environmentalism and supporting local economies.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Jennifer Luebbers on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Stacie West on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Shameful. Can't you just hire professional models for your campaigns? Why encourage this kind of behavior?Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Claudia Beard on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Girls have enough self-esteem issues to face, why are you trying to add to that by judging the "best bum in the world"?Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Jeramie on Feb 11, 2010Comments: We need moreCountry: United StatesFlag
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Name: Michelle Chisholm on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Kate Wilkinson on Feb 11, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Karen Buczynski-Lee on Feb 11, 2010Comments: Stop sexualising girls for profit draped in the lie that you are not. Women the world over can see through this pathetic attempt that harks back to the dark days of the fifties - grow up. Employ more women, women aware that women throughout the world say NO! to companies like American Apparel selling girls for parts, girls for profit! Time for a boycott girls and women!Country: AustraliaFlag
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Name: Samantha Gregg on Feb 12, 2010Comments: I'm sure that Dov Charney had a nice upbringing.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Natalie Brova on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Allegra G. Hollenbeck on Feb 12, 2010Comments: American Apparel ads have always grossed me out. As well as hearing stories of what a womanizing asshole CEO Dov Charney is from friends of former and current employees. It's sad that a company that actually makes clothes in America and pays the workers fair wages, supports an environment that condones sexual harassment and uses it sexism flagrantly and unapologetically in its marketing.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Rella Meston on Feb 12, 2010Comments: piss off American Apparel. Blech.Country: CanadaFlag
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Name: Andrew Rivera on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Jamie Curley on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United KingdomFlag
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Name: Ellen Spear on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Crystal Smith on Feb 12, 2010Comments: Asking girls to subject themselves to this kind of exploitation just so your company can make some cash? Appalling.Country: CanadaFlag
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Name: Patricia Scott on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Tammi McIntyre on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Brian Magnant on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Diane Firtell on Feb 12, 2010Comments: Isn't it about time we harnessed the power of advertising to elevate the consciousness of young women, rather than objectifying them? Cant you do something useful?Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Michael Hallas on Feb 12, 2010Comments: I love everything about your company, but your ads make me refuse to buy your shit. I am not a radical feminist, or a prude, but I detest the promotion of products though images that cause girls in our society to 1) think anorexia = beauty and 2) that their worth is based on their sexuality. So, which is worse: buying a non-union hoodie made in China or contributing to the collective negative body image of women in our culture? I have to interact with the women here and will be raising my daughter here, so I'll take the lesser evil.Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Valérie Beaulieu on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: CanadaFlag
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Name: Sheela Clary on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 12, 2010Comments:Country: United StatesFlag
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Name: Ariel Bock on Feb 12, 2010Comments: Your advertising campaign is offensive and I will not be buying any of your products until you think of something that doesnt take advantage of young (or old) women!Country: United StatesFlag