A storm is brewing between cable news network MSNBC and clothing retailer American Eagle — with actress Sydney Sweeney unexpectedly in the middle of it all.
The controversy began after veteran MSNBC producer Hannah Holland penned a sharply critical opinion piece about American Eagle’s latest campaign starring Sweeney. In her article, Holland alleged that the ad is more than a simple denim promotion — it’s a “carefully coded push” toward conservative ideals, nostalgia-heavy capitalism, and a return to a white-centric vision of America.
![]()
According to Holland, the imagery and styling — from the sunlit backdrops to Sweeney’s relaxed “girl-next-door” look — reflect a bygone media era of the 1990s and early 2000s. She argued that what appears to be playful Americana is, in fact, regressive and exclusionary.
“Together, the campaign feels outdated in the worst way,” she wrote, criticizing not only the actress’s presentation but also the choice to make her the sole face of the promotion. Holland even objected to a wordplay joke comparing “genes” to “jeans,” calling it an example of subtle cultural messaging that reinforces whiteness.

At one point, she went further — likening the ad’s aesthetic choices to “white supremacy” and even “Nazi propaganda.” She also claimed that “young women are being drawn toward conservative thinking through seemingly harmless trends like clean skincare and healthy eating.”
Critics of Holland’s view have called the accusations absurd, arguing that enjoying a wholesome fashion campaign or a nostalgic aesthetic doesn’t amount to political extremism. “If American pop culture is shifting toward more traditional values, maybe it’s because people are tired of having everyday preferences labeled as racist,” one commentator noted.
For American Eagle, the backlash doesn’t seem to be hurting. Since the campaign’s launch, the retailer’s stock has jumped 21%. Many fans have rallied behind Sweeney, insisting she’s not pushing an ideology — she’s just modeling clothes and doing her job.
Whether the MSNBC outrage reflects a legitimate cultural concern or an overblown interpretation, one thing is certain: the debate over what’s “hidden” in fashion advertising isn’t going away anytime soon. And Sydney Sweeney, whether she intended to or not, has found herself at the center of a culture war she didn’t sign up for.