Business Target holds 'emergency' meeting over LGBTQ merchandise in some stores to avoid ‘Bud Light situation’ - Some southern locations move Pride displays, apparel away from storefronts


Some southern Target stores were forced by the corporation to move LGBTQ Pride merchandise away from the front of their locations after customer "outrage" to avoid a "Bud Light situation." Many Target locations across the country feature massive June Pride month displays on an annual basis, with items this year ranging from "tuck friendly" bathing suits for transgender people to mugs that say "gender fluid." But the retail juggernaut has been criticized by some conservatives for the displays, with children’s items particularly irking many customers. A Target insider told Fox News Digital that many locations, mostly in rural areas of the south, have relocated Pride sections to avoid the kind of backlash Bud Light has received in recent weeks after using a transgender influencer in a promotional campaign.

A Target insider said there were "emergency" calls on Friday and some managers and district senior directors were told to tamp down the Pride sections immediately. "We were given 36 hours, told to take all of our Pride stuff, the entire section, and move it into a section that’s a third the size. From the front of the store to the back of the store, you can’t have anything on mannequins and no large signage," the Target insider said. "We call our customers ‘guests,’ there is outrage on their part. This year it is just exponentially more than any other year," the Target insider continued. "I think given the current situation with Bud Light, the company is terrified of a Bud Light situation." The insider, who has worked at the retailer for almost two decades, said Target rarely makes such hasty decisions. They said Friday’s call began with roughly 10 minutes on "how to deal with team member safety" because of the amount of backlash the Pride merchandise has generated, noting that Target Asset Protect & Corporate Security teams were present on the call.

"The call was super quick, it was 15 minutes. The first 10 minutes was about how to keep your team safe and not having to advocate for Target. The last five was, ‘Move this to the back, take down the mannequins and remove the signage,’" the insider said, noting that bathing suits have replaced Pride merchandise in front-of-store displays despite Pride month not even starting until June 1. "It’s all under the guise of trying to increase swim sales," the insider said. "Everyone was like, ‘Thank God,’ because we’re all on the front lines dealing with it." Target did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Fox News Digital has confirmed rural Target stores in South Carolina, Arkansas and Georgia are among the locations to move the Pride sections. Most rank-and-file employees were left in the dark, with many not knowing the Pride sections would be moved until they noticed it themselves. Pride merchandise remains prominently displayed at other locations and on the Target website. Target Pride merchandise includes female-style swimsuits that can be used to "tuck" male genitalia. Some products are also labeled as "Thoughtfully fit on multiple body types and gender expressions." Pride merchandise also includes onesies and rompers for newborn babies, a variety of adult clothing with slogans such as "Super Queer," party supplies, home décor, multiple books and a "Grow At Your Own Pace" saucer planter.

Bud Light sales have plummeted since backlash to the infamous partnership with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney continues to haunt the company more than a month since it came to light. The issue began when Mulvaney publicized that the beer company sent packs of Bud Light featuring the influencer’s face as a way to celebrate a full year of "girlhood." Mulvaney is one of many social media influencers Bud Light has tapped to promote the brand. Mulvaney said the cans were her "most prized possession" on Instagram with a post that featured "#budlightpartner." A video then featured Mulvaney in a bathtub drinking a Bud Light beer as part of the campaign. Some consumers mistakenly thought the cans with Mulvaney's face were being sold to the public. "Bud Light learned an important lesson about wading into the culture wars recently. But partnering with Dylan Mulvaney is nothing compared to what Target is doing," conservative pundit and author Bethany Mandel tweeted.
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A company....actually kinda reading the room for once?! Consider me shocked.
 
Yet another moronic take from Blob. Does he seriously think there's "shoplifting insurance" and that big box stores have it? Who the fuck would underwrite a nearly predictable loss and not charge more than the expected loss?

Even if they did, the vermin predation would still be passed on to the consumer. Shoplifting literally takes money out of the pockets of the people who actually pay for shit.

How do these morons even exist in reality?

That was definitely one of the things that Obeme did that sucked and was stupid, and on its face made no economic sense whatsoever. Plus I'm actually a fan of clunkers and utterly sick of modern shitmobiles that no normal person can maintain, so you have to pay out the ear for some retard with a specialized piece of equipment to fix even the simplest thing. Cars are now as impenetrable as iPhones.

But yeah, being able to do math = white supremacy. Knowing the most rudimentary economics = racism.

And the kind of car I'd prefer to buy, you can barely find thanks to that idiocy.

Ironically I actually came to be critical of Obeme from the left of him. He was a center-left milquetoast shitlib when I wanted an Angry Black Man to go to bat.

He was still better than his senile, half-retarded, hair-sniffing VP.
These idiots really do think insurance is magic money and it's the employer's fault if a shoplifting happens.

We gotta find this dudes social. He’s a cow for sure.

Also why is Satanists always such losers? There never is a chad satanist who bench’s 340 and blasts slurs online 24/7
They're a precursor to Euphoric Atheists. Despite the name, they don't literally believe in Satan, they do it to make Christians mad. Grown men who never went past the edgy phase.
 
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There's an issue someone pointed out to me. Leftwingers will typically demand shit they don't like be destroyed or pushed outside of society (like Kiwi Farms even though the website really isn't political, Null is kinda politically retarded though and A&N is even more so). Rightwingers have an attitude that people will call cucked because they'll always do the "I defend their right to believe X" even when you have people firebombing Christian Family Planning Clinics and defaming them.

It's a very odd oxymoron for Progessives to believe they are the underdogs fighting against all these 'Old White Men' when most of the people pushing the Trans shit are old white men (Pritzer, Stryker, Soros, and the others.) I think most people are fine with gays having orgies in bathhouses if it stays in the bathhouse. No one wants to see that shit. I don't think it's a pendulum, but I think people are waking up to weird childless Millenials trying to be surrogate parents to their children. It's like a reverse Kookaburra.
 
Target’s surrender — which came after concerted attacks from MAGA media personalities — points to a bigger story: The anti-woke right is increasingly wielding heavy-handed tactics — including state power and violent threats — to block corporations from making their own decisions about how to adapt to social change.
Man, what a terrible thing: mobs of rabid partisans using heavy handed tactics such as violent threats and state power to punish individuals and firms for not conforming to their political and social dogmas. Truly this is an unprecedented development.
 
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Leftwingers will typically demand shit they don't like be destroyed or pushed outside of society (like Kiwi Farms even though the website really isn't political, Null is kinda politically retarded though and A&N is even more so).

Kiwifarms being increasingly popular and apolitical is an issue, because it exposes all the grifters and propagandists from the left and right. Kiwifarms is messing up the gameplan. You have to either go with blue team, or be controlled opposition with red team. You aren't allowed to make fun of both of them.
 
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I hope there will be a livecast from Auschwitz II.
 
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I hope there will be a livecast from Auschwitz II.
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I'm fully at 2028 already. I don't care, my empathy has been completely drained. If people start rounding you into camps at this point my only thought will be "neat, Null won't have hosting issues anymore". I'm beyond caring anymore.
-t. man who celebrated when gay marriage was passed by SCOTUS.
 
A look at the store list shows 8 locations in Arkansas. None of them appear to be rural according to some quick research.

Bryant - suburb of Little Rock
Conway - suburb of Little Rock
Fayetteville - second largest city in Arkansas
Fort Smith - third largest city in Arkansas
Jonesboro - fifth largest city in Arkansas
Little Rock / North Little Rock - capital
Rogers - sixth largest city in Arkansas
Not sure about Targets in general but I imagine this is probably as rural as it gets for Targets? WIth Arkansas and other states in the South and Midwest, you have a lot of rural next to and near the suburbs and it all mixes together, and rural people around the LR metro area probably drive 35-40 minutes to do their shopping, so I wouldn't be surprised if this is considered "rural" Targets....

Going from LR to Bryant you have a long mess of stores and traffic along the artery, a lot of rural people travel to and from here to work or to shop. Either way, especially Bryant, Conway, Jonesboro, and Rogers you will have the most rural people shopping, or at least blue collar.
 
Brands Embracing Pride Month Confront a Volatile Political Climate
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Jordyn Holman and Julie Creswell
2023-05-25 19:16:18GMT

pride01.jpg
“We are making adjustments to our plans,” a spokeswoman for Target said after some customers reacted angrily to Pride Month displays in stores — including throwing merchandise on the floor.Credit...Lindsey Nicholson/Education Images/Universal Images Group, via Getty Images

For years, Pride Month, the annual celebration for L.G.B.T.Q. Americans, has afforded companies a marketing opportunity to tap into the buying power of a group with growing financial, political and social clout.

Yet, while these efforts have always faced some opposition, brands and marketers say the country’s current political environment — especially around transgender issues — has made this year’s campaigns more complicated. This week Target became the latest company to rethink its approach after facing criticism for its Pride collection, which included clothes and books for children that drew outrage from some on the right.

The retailer moved its Pride displays — including rainbow-striped collared shirts, yellow hoodies reading “Not a Phase” and baby clothing and accessories — from the entrances of some Target stores around the country and placed them in the back.

Target said it was concerned “about threats impacting our team members’ sense of safety and well-being while at work” after some customers had screamed at employees and thrown the Pride-themed merchandise on the floor.

Among the items angering some customers was a one-piece, tuck-friendly swimsuit — a bathing suit that has extra material for the crotch area for individuals who want to conceal their genitalia. Some critics erroneously claimed that the swimsuit was being sold to children; Target said it was available only in adult sizes. The collection also includes children’s books about transgender issues and gender fluidity.

One woman recorded a TikTok video in a Target store on Monday in which she became angry at seeing a greeting card that read “So Glad You Came Out” and a yellow onesie that said “¡Bien Proud!”

“If that doesn’t give you a reason to boycott Target, I don’t know what does,” she said.

In a statement, a company spokeswoman said, “Given these volatile circumstances, we are making adjustments to our plans, including removing items that have been at the center of the most significant confrontational behavior.” She added that the company, which has been selling Pride Month merchandise for a decade, remained committed to the L.G.B.T.Q. community “and standing with them as we celebrate Pride Month and throughout the year.”

While Target said its decision had been made in the interest of employee safety, many said its actions — along with a conservative backlash against Bud Light after it worked with a transgender influencer — might alienate the community it was seeking to support. And those who criticized Target and Bud Light in the first place may now feel further emboldened to attack inclusive initiatives by other companies.

“We’re in a new space here with safety and employee safety being threatened by policy and purpose,” said Vanitha Swaminathan, professor of marketing at the University of Pittsburgh. “I can’t say that you can disregard employee safety. That’s very core to what a company has to do. At the same time, Target can still, from a policy standpoint, be supportive of their initial stance. It’s sad to see that we’ve reached this point in our culture wars.”

Marketing campaigns around Pride Month in June have become routine for many companies, with opposition cropping up at times. Last year, for instance, Pizza Hut faced calls for a boycott after it recommended “Big Wig,” a book featuring drag performers, as part of its children’s summer reading program.

Yet companies and marketers say the political climate makes this year different — primarily because a number of Republican-led states have introduced and passed legislation restricting transition care for transgender minors and adults, and transgender rights has become a galvanizing issue for many conservatives.

GLAAD, the L.G.B.T.Q. advocacy group that works with more than 160 companies, is considering having communications professionals in its GLAAD Media Institute work with brands that are planning Pride Month celebrations so they can better respond to criticism.

“We do feel like we’re at a moment where, with the politicization of trans and gender-nonconforming folks, that we probably need to assemble a Pride war room for brands so that we can push back,” Sarah Kate Ellis, the group’s chief executive, said in an interview.

On Thursday, GLAAD and six other advocacy groups called on Target to return to its stores and its website any Pride merchandise it had removed and to release a statement “in the next 24 hours reaffirming their commitment” to the L.G.B.T.Q. community.

When faced with criticism and social media calls for boycotts in the past, most companies learned that the declarations of outrage soon faded away.

Then Bud Light happened. Owned by the beer giant Anheuser-Busch, Bud Light continues to struggle with the fallout from a social media campaign in mid-March with the transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. After calls for a boycott of the beer, sales in the four weeks ending in mid-May dropped more than 23 percent from a year earlier, according to data from the research firm NIQ and Bump Williams Consulting, which works with the alcoholic beverage industry.

In some markets in the South, such as Jacksonville, Fla., and New Orleans, Bud Light’s sales were down 40 percent in those four weeks.

Anheuser-Busch, which in recent years has released rainbow-hued bottles and cans of Bud Light for Pride Month, did not respond to a question about its plans for this year.

Some marketing and communications consultants said the negative reaction to Bud Light’s campaign with Ms. Mulvaney was a product of the beer’s generally more politically conservative customer base. Companies like Nike or Starbucks can more easily create products or campaigns around gay and transgender issues or Pride Month because their consumers tend to be younger and more progressive, said David Johnson, the chief executive of Strategic Vision PR Group in Atlanta.

“When they embrace the gay or transgender community, it’s not out of line with their core beliefs,” he said.

A number of companies are moving forward with their Pride Month plans. In June, the Coors Light Denver Pride Parade will weave its way through the city. Advertisements for a one-piece Adidas swimsuit created by the South African queer designer Rich Mnisi feature a transgender man as the model. Levi’s has a campaign showing a half-dozen gay and transgender people talking about how they show up while wearing the company’s denim and tops.

But a number of other companies are being much less forthcoming about specific Pride Month plans. And some L.G.B.T.Q. advocates criticized Target for seeming to cave to pressure. (The company’s decision did come as employees in the retail industry have faced increasingly aggressive behavior from customers since the start of the pandemic.)

Target also removed a Pride line from Abprallen, an L.G.B.T.Q. fashion and accessories company based in London, some of whose designs have been criticized for depicting satanic symbols like pentagrams and a shirt that reads “Satan respects pronouns.” Abprallen did not respond to a request for comment.

“We’ll find out in the next week which companies are continuing to make a push and do Pride Month campaigns,” said Matt Skallerud, the president of Pink Media, which specializes in L.G.B.T.Q. online marketing. “If companies we know have been supportive of Pride Month don’t show up this year, their absence will be noticed, and I’d be concerned that could harm them.”

Advocacy groups are wary that all of this could create a chilling effect, especially when it comes to attaining a broader representation of L.G.B.T.Q. people in advertising.

“White gay men are the one segment that are most likely represented on our screens, whether it’s programing or ads,” said Lisette Arsuaga, co-founder of the Alliance for Inclusive and Multicultural Marketing. “We now started moving forward with a greater representation of all of the letters within the L.G.B.T.Q.”

The overall consumer sentiment for seeing trans representation on TV and in advertising hasn’t changed, according to recent GLAAD research. In a survey that was conducted in February, GLAAD said, 75 percent of people who did not identify as L.G.B.T.Q. were comfortable seeing those people represented in marketing campaigns. That figure held steady from 2020.

“You can absolutely roll out an ad campaign and include L.G.B.T.Q. folks in it,” Ms. Ellis of GLAAD said. “And at the same time, there is this political right-wing arm that you have to be aware of when you’re doing it and just be prepared for.”
 
On Thursday, GLAAD and six other advocacy groups called on Target to return to its stores and its website any Pride merchandise it had removed and to release a statement “in the next 24 hours reaffirming their commitment” to the L.G.B.T.Q. community.
Translation: Apologize and kiss the ring on the base of society's girl dick target.


Yeah fuck gladd...and not on the way they want to be fucked.
 
I looked around to see what merchandise was pissing people off.

Seems it was shirts that say stuff like "Satan respects pronouns" or something, some pins that call for violence against stuff you don't like, and swimwear that may or may not be for kids.

I'm honestly confused by the Satan shirts. Is Satan good because he's on the side of transgender folk, or are trans folk bad and Satan recognizes it? Either way, lol.
 

Bud Lite was probably the straw that broke the camels back. When all this talk about sexual rights was going on throughout the 90's and early 00's, the one consistent argument made was "what people do in their own bedrooms is their own business". Which is how it ultimately got sold to the political right. But once the Rainbow Community got their way, they altered the deal. Not only was what they did in their bedroom their business, they were determined with religious fervor to make it everyone elses business too.

Not only were they going to display their business publicly and with everyone else, but they would also demand everyone else be LEGALLY REQUIRED to approve of their behavior. I'm surprised the push back took this long to materialize tbqh.
 
I'm honestly confused by the Satan shirts. Is Satan good because he's on the side of transgender folk, or are trans folk bad and Satan recognizes it? Either way, lol.
"Even evil has standards".

From TV Tropes, which I could have sworn got pozzed at some point but shows how much the situation has degenerated:
One of the easiest ways to highlight just how bad something or someone evil is: have an otherwise-remorseless villain reject it.

It's often to show that a new villain is really bad if even Doctor Annihilation is appalled by them.
The most common taboos of this type in contemporary Western works involve sexual violence or ill-treatment of children. Or both at once. Common gangster-story examples are to have the Neighbourhood-Friendly Gangsters, by contrast with the Ruthless Foreign Gangsters, refuse to sell illegal drugs or to be disrespectful and abusive in their treatment of the women who they pimp.

They're trying to show that their side is so common sense that even Satan agrees with them, not even Satan would deadname a troon.

But then they failed to do the part where even evil will leave children alone.
 
the cows are once again chewing their cud about fascists, corporations, and bigots ...
Don't make me tap the sign.... Corperations dont realize that they can never reason with these people. You must defend their degenerate kinks and fetishes otherwise youre a bigot for suggesting they tone it down. Ive seen this time and time again. Normies get mad or the business decision to put gay shit on marketing gets shut down and all of a sudden all the 'activists' that they courted leave them. So now you've pissed of the NPC consumer base and lost the precious gay dollars that they spent millions in marketing to capture.
 
But then they failed to do the part where even evil will leave children alone.
Even Anton levay the og who you can argue can be held responsible for this whole "I love Satan cause I love dick." Bullshit. Made it clear in his books, "do as you wish so long as no harm comes to children and nobody who doesn't want to be involved doesn't feel pressured."


Really if you remove all the bells and whistles about dark elder ones and rituals, his books are pretty much self help books that say the same canned, "if you want something go get it and don't wait around for the universe to do something for you."

So yeah while the devil will never deadname a Troon he also knows you don't hurt or go after your enemies offspring.
 
For those who want a quick summary of this and any other article like this:

"Waaaaah waaaaaah boo hoo sob is not OUR fault citizens don't like the culture we push on them and call it "natural change"! It's those dang dirty comaervatids! They could never even in some small way represent the voice of a trans fatigued public! OUR SUFFERUNG IS YOUR FAULT. YOU DID THIS TO US"

*tard typing is intentional for once lmao
 
Kiwifarms being increasingly popular and apolitical is an issue, because it exposes all the grifters and propagandists from the left and right. Kiwifarms is messing up the gameplan. You have to either go with blue team, or be controlled opposition with red team. You aren't allowed to make fun of both of them.
There's a reason that none of the people that should be slapping down the DDOS attacks on the site have done nothing. People in power do not want these kinds of sites to prosper and they loathe people making fun of them and keeping records.
 
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