Sometimes the best tweet is no tweet at all, considering how many backlashes have erupted on Twitter. High profile figures step in it often, and brands have a tough time navigating even semi-political waters. A seemingly well-intended tweet might actually come across as chaos-inducing and tone deaf, like when people threatened to boycott Thin Mints (the tastiest cookie of all) after the Girl Scouts tweeted-and-deleted support for arch-conservative, newly installed Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. Now Gap is dealing with fallout from a not-great tweet while the U.S. anxiously awaits vote counting results after Trump falsely claimed victory over Joe Biden.
In the now-deleted tweet, the caption to a red-and-blue-split hoodie read like this: “The one thing we know, is that together, we can move forward.” (And yep, red and blue hearts did appear.)
The suggestion that a hoodie can solve all problems that divide the U.S. (and “close the gap” by literally closing the hoodie in GIF form) is not, uh, going over well when so many American people are hurting in 2020. After all, Congress can’t close their gap long enough to pass a second stimulous bill. So, people hopped on the sentiment all of with the silliness that it beckoned: “This tweet will divide the United States of America more than any election.”
This tweet will divide the United States of America more than any election
— Cody Huffman (@codyhuffman85) November 4, 2020
And the similarities to Kendell Jenner’s Pepsi commercial did not go unnoticed.
“(dusts off hands) That settles that.” – A Sweatshirt.
— ALEX GRADET :: #Vote :: #BLM ::#WearADamnMask (@menace2snacks) November 4, 2020
Aww. This might keep the caged kids separated from their families at the border warm. All we needed was this sweater of unity. If Kendall Jenner cracks open a Pepsi, we’ll be singing kumbaya.
— Farrah Alexander (@AuthorFarrah) November 4, 2020
Gap, that’s a hard fucking no. We don’t move forward & forget about racism. Misogyny. Corruption. Kids in cages. 240,000 dead Americans. People need to be held accountable. And then maybe we can move forward. Til then, fuck no.
— MargieMay (@marham50) November 4, 2020
ew
— Carol Channing Tatum O’Neal (@Jakeloewenthal) November 4, 2020
I love you guys. You sat in your Teams meeting and thought
“Yeah a message of unity after the most militant election since the one after the Civil War, yeah – let’s close the GAP. Yeah. Lovely idea
*pause to snort high grade cocaine*
Yeahhhh let’s do it on twitter as well.”— Disappointed Optimist (@disappoptimism) November 4, 2020
This is fucking dumb
— Adam ElIis (@moby_dickhead) November 4, 2020
No.
— naomi (@naomiblueriver) November 4, 2020
— Oliver Snoddy (@olisnoddy) November 4, 2020
Sapna Maheshwari of the New York Times relays word from a Gap spokesperson, who asserts that this hoodie (unlike the tweet) wasn’t real, and it wasn’t for sale.
Gap has now deleted this tweet. A spokesperson told me that it was not a real hoodie for sale. pic.twitter.com/CDV18Zaz48
— Sapna Maheshwari (@sapna) November 4, 2020
Further, the Gap would like to stress that “[t]he intention of our social media post, that featured a red and blue hoodie, was to show the power of unity.” The spokesperson also states that “[i]t was just too soon for this message. We remain optimistic that our country will come together to drive positive change for all.”
Gap tells me: “The intention of our social media post, that featured a red and blue hoodie, was to show the power of unity. It was just too soon for this message. We remain optimistic that our country will come together to drive positive change for all.” https://t.co/njltAfaEIn
— Sapna Maheshwari (@sapna) November 4, 2020