Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle jeans campaign spoofed by comedian
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Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle advertisement campaign has launched to significant reactions from both fans and financial markets, inspiring a comedian to parody it to the delight of his audience.

Los Angeles-based comedian Michael Pavano seized the opportunity and spoofed the promotion featuring the 27-year-old actress in a new video shared on his Instagram and TikTok pages, which boast over 1.1 million total followers.

Pavano, known for previously wearing drag costumes for comedic content on his social media pages, garnered more than 13,000 likes within two hours on Monday for his rendition of the Sweeney advertisement.

‘So far the sketch has been received very well,’ Pavano told Daily Mail exclusively. ‘I’m always super grateful when people can see the hard work I put into my characters and comedy.’

Pavano, who appeared on the TV series Big Top earlier this year, captioned the clip ‘gripping all the right places’ adding emojis of jeans and a heart; and hashtags for phrases such as satire, parody and impressions.

The comedian donned a purple denim ensemble, a dark brown wig and of strategically placed a pair of balloons for comedic purposes; he added a voiceover in which he made a series of pretentious nonsensical statements about genetics.

Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad campaign has debuted to strong reactions from fans and financial markets leading comedian Michael Pavano to spoof it to plaudits from his audience

The viral clip was mocking American Eagle's autumn advertising rollout, which has the tagline, 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans'

Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle ad campaign has debuted to strong reactions from fans and financial markets leading comedian Michael Pavano to spoof it to plaudits from his audience

In the voiceover, Pavano mocked the overt double meaning of the phrases jeans/genes in a parody of the American Eagle ad campaign. 

‘Jeans are passed down from parents to us, often determining traits like your hair color … and even eye color,’ Pavano said.  

He added, ‘My jeans are blue – so they’re like, better than yours. They say people with blonde hair and blue eyes, their nature is favorite. I don’t say it, but they do – but I buy it!’

The vapid and hypersexual monologue was a clear lampooning of the ad campaign centered around the A-list actress that had been garnering controversy in recent days.

Pavano continued: ‘I mean, who wouldn’t want my jeans? I know you do, you dirty boy. Let’s be so real. 

‘Tight blue jeans from American Eagle is the only denim I’ll put on my body – and it’s not just the denim that’s tight.’

Pavano, a veteran of The Groundlings comedy troupe, said in the skit, ‘This pair of blue denim is clinging to me for dear life … I like it when they stretch super wide and slide right in – I mean on.

‘They hug all the right places – and some very wrong ones.’

Pavano has amassed more than more than 1.1 million combined followers on his Instagram and TikTok pages told Daily Mail exclusively: 'So far the sketch has been received very well'

Pavano has amassed more than more than 1.1 million combined followers on his Instagram and TikTok pages told Daily Mail exclusively: ‘So far the sketch has been received very well’

The vapid and hypersexual monologue was a clear lampooning of the ad campaign centered around the A-list actress that had been garnering controversy in recent days

The vapid and hypersexual monologue was a clear lampooning of the ad campaign centered around the A-list actress that had been garnering controversy in recent days 

Pavano donned a purple denim ensemble, a dark brown wig and of strategically placed a pair of balloons for comedic purposes

Pavano donned a purple denim ensemble, a dark brown wig and of strategically placed a pair of balloons for comedic purposes

Pavano integrated physical gags like letting the air out of a balloon in the online skit

Pavano integrated physical gags like letting the air out of a balloon in the online skit

Pavano also joked about the challenges some face in trying to put on a tight pair of jeans.

‘I try my hardest to button them up – one snap at a time,’ Pavano said. ‘My hands are shaking, my core is engaged, my pelvic floor is lifted higher than my dog after he got into my batch of special brownies.

‘By the time I finally get them on, I’m sweating, I’m gasping. I’m [sneezing].’

Pavano wrapped up the comedic monologue as a faux Sweeney in saying, ‘Sorry – is it the denim or the blood flow being cut off at my hips because they’re so tight? 

‘Go and get yourself a pair of Sydney’s blue jeans – only at Baskin Robbins – whoops, wrong brand.’ 

Pavano was applauded by many of his followers for the aesthetic aspect of the bit.

‘How do you look exactly like her but also Megan and Nicole and Blake and Dakota?!’ one of his fans said in reference to past impressions he’s done of celebs such as Meghan Markle and Dakota Johnson.

Another user suggested that American Eagle ‘needs to be paying [Pavano] for this for the amount of traffic [Pavano’s] sending to their ad.’

Sydney Sweeney fans have rushed to her defense after her new campaign for American Eagle was branded 'Nazi propaganda' by woke critics

Sydney Sweeney fans have rushed to her defense after her new campaign for American Eagle was branded ‘Nazi propaganda’ by woke critics 

In an accompanying video, Sydney is seen buttoning up her jeans as she muses: 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color... my genes are blue'

In an accompanying video, Sydney is seen buttoning up her jeans as she muses: ‘Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color… my genes are blue’ 

The viral clip was mocking American Eagle’s autumn advertising rollout, which has the tagline, ‘Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.’

In a series of images, the Spokane, Washington-born beauty – who is set to play boxer Christy Martin in an upcoming biopic already garnering Oscar buzz – is seen modeling a variety of denim-based ensembles. 

In an accompanying video, Sydney is seen buttoning up her jeans as she muses: ‘Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality and even eye colour… my genes are blue’. 

A second advert sees the camera pan down Sydney’s chest as she models a plunging denim jumpsuit. 

She muses: ‘My body’s composition is determined by my genes…’ before exclaiming: ‘Hey, eyes up here’ as the camera cuts back to her face. 

The advert has divided fans, however, with one critic calling the clip ‘one of the loudest and most obvious racialized dog whistles we’ve seen and heard in a while.’

The phrase ‘great genes’ is ‘historically used to celebrate whiteness, thinness and attractiveness,’ which it said made ‘this campaign seem to be a tone-deaf marketing move,’ a Salon report on the backlash read.

Taking to social media, many expressed their shock at messaging – which they compared to Nazi propaganda. 

Pavano was applauded by many of his followers for the aesthetic aspect of the bit

Pavano was applauded by many of his followers for the aesthetic aspect of the bit 

The Emmy-nominated actress is the face of the label's autumn advertising rollout, which has the tagline, 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans'

The Emmy-nominated actress is the face of the label’s autumn advertising rollout, which has the tagline, ‘Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans’

Outraged fans penned sentiments such as, ‘So Sydney (& American Eagle) somehow expect audiences to not interpret this visual as a euphemism for eugenics and white supremacy?’ 

‘The Sydney Sweeney American Eagle ad campaign is just modern day Nazi propaganda. Like it’s wild how blatant it is. Things are weird right now, man.’; 

Another said that ‘the most nazi part of the Sydney sweeney add for me was the use of the word offspring.’

Said one commenter: ‘”Jeans (Genes) are past down from parent to offspring;””My jeans (genes) are blue;” “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans (genes);” Nothing is ever a coincidence, this is eugenics.”‘

TikTok named Angie under the handle @vital_media_marketing then reviewed the ad and pointed out what she felt were problematic elements with the underlying message.

Angie said: As it’s panning up her body and on her face and her features, she’s literally talking about her family tree and the genetics that have been handed down to her, her blonde hair and her blue eyes, and how great they are.’

Angie said that ‘praising Sydney Sweeney for her great genes in the context of her white blonde hair, blue eye appearance’ makes for ‘one of the loudest and most obvious racialized dog whistles we’ve seen and heard in a while.’

Many people panned the tone of the ad campaign on American Eagle’s Instagram page, as one user quipped, It’s giving “Subtle 1930’s Germany.”‘

Another user echoed, ‘Close enough, welcome back 1930s Germany.’ 

American Eagle's choice of words in the campaign garnered heavy scrutiny

American Eagle’s choice of words in the campaign garnered heavy scrutiny 

One person said the promotion ‘is what happens when you have no [people] of color in a room … particularly in a time like this.

‘This ad campaign got so caught up in this “clever” play on words and this stunt the ppl in the room missed what was so blatantly obvious to anyone not White. I’d expect this from Abercrombie… but not yall.’

One user wrote of the promotion featuring the surging star, ‘This is such a f****d up campaign’ while another called it ‘weird as hell.’

Others vented about the message they felt the campaign inherently sent, as one said they were ‘never shopping at AE again’ while another asked the fashion house, ‘What are you doing???’

One Instagram user speculated, ‘This has to be rage bait,’ while another suggested the clothing retailer ‘read the room…’ in reference to the current campaign.

Another user asked, ‘Who on your marketing team said this was a good idea.’

The advert has divided fans, however, with one critic calling the clip 'one of the loudest and most obvious racialized dog whistles we've seen and heard in a while.'

The advert has divided fans, however, with one critic calling the clip ‘one of the loudest and most obvious racialized dog whistles we’ve seen and heard in a while.’ 

Yet many were quick to defend Sydney, branding the backlash ‘unhinged’. 

They shared on X/Twitter: ‘I’m not sure how to say this nicely but if you think a jeans ad with a pun about Sydney Sweeney being pretty is a nazi dogwhistle you genuinely need to put the phone down for a while.’;

‘everyone is seriously reading too much into this and y’all need to go take a hike or something because sydney sweeney is literally just promoting jeans, not “nazi propaganda”’; 

‘The claim that Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle ad is pro-eugenics because of a “good genes/jeans” pun is genuinely unhinged. It’s a denim campaign, not a manifesto. Not every blonde with blue eyes is a Nazi. Some of you need a history book — and a nap’;

‘You guys don’t have to like Sydney Sweeney or the ways she promotes herself but don’t you think comparing those Jean commercials to nazi propaganda is a tad extreme?’

Daily Mail has reached out to reps for Sweeney and American Eagle for further comment on the story. 

Sweeney said in a July 23 news release about the fall campaign: ‘There is something so effortless about American Eagle.’

She said of the clothier: ‘It’s the perfect balance of being put-together but still feeling like yourself.’

Yet many were quick to defend Sydney, branding the backlash 'unhinged'

Yet many were quick to defend Sydney, branding the backlash ‘unhinged’

Sweeney said in a July 23 news release about the fall campaign: 'There is something so effortless about American Eagle – it’s the perfect balance of being put-together but still feeling like yourself'

Sweeney said in a July 23 news release about the fall campaign: ‘There is something so effortless about American Eagle – it’s the perfect balance of being put-together but still feeling like yourself’

In a series of images, the Spokane, Washington-born beauty was seen modeling a variety of denim-based ensembles

In a series of images, the Spokane, Washington-born beauty was seen modeling a variety of denim-based ensembles 

In terms of the charitable aspect of the ad campaign, American Eagle Outfitters is working with Crisis Text Line in an effort to provide grants for mental health support and crisis intervention

In terms of the charitable aspect of the ad campaign, American Eagle Outfitters is working with Crisis Text Line in an effort to provide grants for mental health support and crisis intervention 

The Euphoria star continued: ‘Their commitment to creating pieces that make you feel confident and comfortable in your own skin is something that resonates with me.

‘It’s rare to find a brand that grows with you, the way American Eagle has for generations.’

The Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood actress wrapped up in saying, ‘They have literally been there with me through every version of myself.’

American Eagle Outfitters president Jennifer Foyle opened up about the ad campaign, which is slated to raise money for domestic violence charities, in the news release.

‘This fall season, American Eagle is celebrating what makes our brand iconic – trendsetting denim that leads, never follows,’ Foyle said. ‘Innovative fits and endless versatility reflect how our community wears their denim: mixed, matched, layered and lived in.’

The fashion executive explained why Sweeney made for the perfect focal point of the promotion.

‘With Sydney Sweeney front and center, she brings the allure, and we add the flawless wardrobe for the winning combo of ease, attitude and a little mischief,’ Foyle said.

In terms of the charitable aspect of the ad campaign, American Eagle Outfitters is working with Crisis Text Line in an effort to provide grants for mental health support and crisis intervention. 

Proceeds from a special edition of The Sydney Jean will be donated to the organization. 

Among the related grants include a $100,000 Signature Grant posted this past February 2025 in an effort to expand programs at Historically Black Colleges and Universities.  

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