ADVERTISEMENT

Victoria’s Secret has just signed its first-ever size-14 model. Her name is Ali Tate-Cutler and she will be featured in a collaboration ad campaign with U.K. lingerie brand Bluebella. The move to hire a plus-size model, however, was met with criticism, as some people think that the company is just covering its tracks. Less than one year ago, Victoria’s Secret chief marketing officer Ed Razek was slammed for insensitive remarks on-brand talent.

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Responsible for a homogenous, airbrushed, and sexualized brand image that is now largely considered as outdated, Razek infuriated the public with comments he made in a Vogue.com interview last November about Victoria’s Secret’s casting practices: “Shouldn’t you have transsexuals in the show? No. No, I don’t think we should. Well, why not? Because the show is a fantasy.”

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Surprisingly, the confirmation of Razek’s departure came on the same day when news talks began circulating that Victoria’s Secret hired its first-ever transgender model, Valentina Sampaio, who is working with VS Pink.

Image credits: imageglam

Regardless, Ali Tate-Cutler was stoked to work with the brand. “It feels amazing, I feel on top of the world,” Ali told E! News. “When I went in today to the VS store for the launch of the collaboration it felt surreal. I never expected that I was going to see an image of myself on the wall next to these famous models that I have been looking up to since I was a little girl. The whole thing came about when I got cast to be in Bluebella in London through my agents at Milk. It all unfolded from there and I was told this was going to be on the wall at VS and carried in their flagship stores.”

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

She also said she doesn’t get hung up on the term ‘plus-size.’ “I do know that I am not the first plus-size girl to become a model, but I am the first 12-14 size model. Size 14 is actually the average size of women in America and I do think that we need to see more of it in media and fashion because most women are that size. So, we need to be accurately represented in brands and media. For Victoria’s Secret, I am so excited that they decided to put a size 14 women like me on the wall. I feel like they are headed in the right direction and they are listening to their audience who have requested to see more women of diverse shapes and sizes. I think if they continue to head in that direction they will be on to a jackpot because that is reflective of what the average woman is in America.”

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: ali_tate_culer

“When we look at fashion history it’s taken a long time but we can also look back and see that in the 1950s there was a different body image that was more popular,” Ali said. “Predominately the beauty standard that has dominated the fashion scope has been a skinny tall body. This was damaging for women all around the world to see this because we were told time and time again that you can only be a beautiful woman if you are tall skinny and predominately white which has changed so much in the last 10 years. I think it took so long because we needed disruption in the industry. We needed people to step up and be the whistle-blower of the fashion industry. More than ever we are seeing all different shapes and sizes in fashion weeks around the world. They are heading campaigns of all different kinds. It has been changing but it just took a while to get there.”

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Image credits: ali_tate_cutler

Some people, however, weren’t happy with the news

Image credits: readytostare

And pointed out what Ali said in the past

Image credits: readytostare

Here’s what others said about it

ADVERTISEMENT