Kim Kardashian, the founder of underwear, shapewear and clothing brand, Skims, stepped out at the recent Met Gala, touting her extreme dieting tactics to lose 16 pounds so she could fit into a vintage gown once worn by Marilyn Monroe.
With a $3.2 billion valuation reported by The Business of Fashion, Skims mission states that they’re “setting new standards by providing solutions for every body.” But Kardashian’s public statements about her crash dieting to fit into a dress do not align with her mega-brand’s positioning. And it’s a problem.
After all, Skims is continuing to build on its partnership with the U.S. Olympic team, most recently outfitting athletes in loungewear for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. People around the world will be watching as the brand leverages its partnerships with professional athletes. Those athletes, of course, represent hard work, strength, balanced health and well-being. They aren’t eating tomatoes and wearing a sauna suit twice a day to fit into a dress.
So, what does Kardashian stand for? Is it body inclusivity and celebrating “every body,” or is that a facade that’s just good for business? Her words have weight. And they are not aligned with what Skims the brand is built upon. Skims did not return a request for comment.
Kardashian’s remarks about fitting into her Met Gala gown is also yet another example of someone glorifying dysfunctional behaviors to attain a size and image goal that our society has long upheld as “ideal.”
When asked about the initial fitting for the dress Marilyn Monroe wore in 1962 to sing “Happy Birthday” to President John F. Kennedy, Kardashian shared with Vogue, “I always thought she [Marilyn] was extremely curvy. I imagined I might be smaller in some places where she was bigger and bigger in places where she was smaller. So, when it didn’t fit me, I wanted to cry because it can’t be altered at all.”
Her reaction to wanting “to cry” resulted in crash dieting over the course of three weeks. “I would wear a sauna suit twice a day, run on the treadmill, completely cut out all sugar and all carbs, and just eat the cleanest veggies and protein. I didn’t starve myself, but I was so strict,” she recounted.
Would you encourage your daughter, niece, or friend to behave this way?









