Zara is familiar with controversy. They produced a shirt that looked like a Nazi concentration camp uniform, refused entry to a woman in a hijab at a store in Paris, and more recently, used thin models in a “Love Your Curves” advertisement. Now, the Spanish clothing brand is facing criticism again for a skirt that appears to show Pepe the Frog, a popular internet meme that has become a hate symbol.
The denim skirt, which has since been pulled from Zara’s website, features an image that strongly resembles the Pepe the Frog character. It was part of their “Oil on Denim” festival-inspired collection, which includes “Nope” jackets and brightly-colored peacock illustrations.
When the Pepe-lookalike skirt made its debut, one social media user was quick to take notice. “Zara us really out there trying to sell a P*pe the frog skirt, apparently unaware (?) of its current implications,” one Twitter user wrote Monday night. “This is bad,” she added.
This is bad pic.twitter.com/8a2cbx0T70
— goth kulture (@meaganrosae) April 18, 2017
Pepe the Frog, which started off as an innocent green frog comic, was designated a hate symbol by the Anti-Defamation League last year when it became synonymous with white supremacy. According to their Hate Symbols Database:
The Pepe the Frog character did not originally have racist or anti-Semitic connotations. Internet users appropriated the character and turned him into a meme, placing the frog in a variety of circumstances and saying many different things.
[…]In recent years, the rise of the “alt right” part of the white supremacist movement, which gets some support from the Internet sites mentioned earlier, has led to an increase in “alt right” Pepe memes. This trend has been made worse by the heated 2016 presidential election. While there are many supporters of Pepe memes, the use of racist and bigoted versions appears to be on the rise rather than falling.
Many on social media agreed that featuring the symbol on the skirt was a misstep. Others, however, believed that a different frog was pictured or that Zara had done nothing wrong.See how social media reacted to the Pepe the Frog skirt below:
Social Media Reacts to Zara’s Pepe the Frog Skirt
Zara is really out there trying to sell a P*pe the frog skirt, apparently unaware (?) of its current implications https://t.co/gQ3bimsdg2
— goth kulture (@meaganrosae) April 18, 2017
Make Pepe great again
— Nick Bunzick (@goodbyenicholas) April 18, 2017
@meaganrosae @biancaxunise Having just read way too much about Zara they have withdrawn handbags w/ swastikas on them & pajamas that look like concentration camp unis
— Brandon (@brandonzwa) April 18, 2017
Zara ¯_(ツ)_/¯ https://t.co/VxLi0B55XF
— Tom (@ahdamia) April 18, 2017
So Zara put a (allegedly) Pepe meme on a skirt and it's a hate symbol now but it actually looks like Old Man Jenkins to me pic.twitter.com/UUphmEMfkg
— Alexa DeAngelis (@_deange) April 18, 2017
People freaking out over a CARTOON FROG on a skirt. Welcome to 2017 America. https://t.co/Z5GJzadyAU
— Darnell D. Scott (@darnelldscott) April 18, 2017
Omg Zara are selling a Pepe skirt and people are losing their minds I'm done. pic.twitter.com/pnlOyD0jhj
— Danielle Louise (@danidotx) April 18, 2017
Ugh Zara why did you make this skirt?!? Now I need to rethink my obsession with them https://t.co/bF3JXyrkV5
— missDTM (@missDTM) April 18, 2017
What are your thoughts on Zara’s Pepe the Frog skirt? Do you agree with their decision to pull the skirt from their site? Sound off in the comments section below!