Skip to content
Search

‘Brandy Hellville’: The Allegations Against the Cult Gen-Z Fashion Brand

‘Brandy Hellville’: The Allegations Against the Cult Gen-Z Fashion Brand

“One size fits most” 

It’s the guiding ethos behind the cult classic Gen-Z clothing brand Brandy Melville, known for its Americana aesthetics and stylized social media presence beloved by pre-teen girls across the country. But in the new Max documentary Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion, Oscar winning director Eva Orner explores a behind-the-scenes look at the company culture and dozens of allegations of racism, anti-feminism, fatphobia, and abhorrent fast fashion business and production practices. 


The popular Instagram account and retail empire first opened a brick-and-mortar store in 2009. While the company itself was started by Italian father and son manufacturing duo Silvio and Stephan Marsan, Brandy Melville defined itself on social media for its simple (read: skinny) silhouettes and California teen style — a look heavily promoted by both popular celebrities and content-producing teen girls on platforms like Tumblr, YouTube, and eventually TikTok. The brand sold clothes without sizes and became known for marketing and hiring practices that pushed skinny, white, and beautiful young girls as their target demographic. (Neither the founders nor the brand participated in the documentary.) 

But according to the documentary, behind the scenes was a company culture that prioritized thinness and whiteness over anything else, often at the emotional expense of its workers. Several former employees spoke out, describing that they were required to take daily photos of their outfits, which were then sent to Stephan Marsan over text. “If Stephan didn’t like some of them, he would send it back to me privately and say, ‘Fire her,’ ” a former Brandy executive said anonymously in the documentary. 

Workers of color alleged that while their white counterparts were placed at the front of the store as greeters, Asian workers were constantly forced to work the checkout counter, while Black workers were relegated to fitting room associates and stockroom employees, where they would be out of the view of shoppers. “We were all being pushed to the back, out of sight,” Kali, a Black former Brandy Melville employee recounted. “But it wasn’t something we were necessarily mad about, because I loved being around my people, like people of color.” Workers also detailed either developing or continuing disordered eating practices while working at the store, and feeling like they had to choose between keeping their jobs or saving their relationships with food. (Representatives for Brandy Melville did not respond to Rolling Stone’s request for comment. The brand’s chief executive Marsan could not be reached.)

As movements like body positivity and neutrality have begun to impact the fashion industry, criticism of Brandy Melville’s lack of size inclusivity has been consistent for years without any reported effect on the store’s sales. But the documentary also alleges that company culture inside the brand veered toward racism and antisemitism. In a 2021 investigation, Insider reported that a 30-plus person Brandy group chat — which included Marsan, his brother Yvan, and the company’s chief financial officer — was riddled with memes, porn, and jokes about Hitler. In 150 screenshots reviewed by Insider, Hitler was mentioned 24 times and dozens included jokes about Black people and used the n-word. 

Stephan also encouraged staffers he and other executives considered pretty to use secretive perks and bonuses, like getting cash tips when they recommended clothing, using a company-paid Uber, or staying at a Brandy Mellville apartment in New York. According to Insider, one Brandy Melville employee stayed at the apartment in 2015 and went out to dinner with a 31-year-old manager. After two drinks, her memory blanked out. The then 21-year-old alleged that she was drugged and raped by the manager and went to the hospital for the recommend HIV and STIs treatment, but declined to pursue charges or file a police report because she was afraid of losing her work visa and having to leave the country. 

In addition to allegations of poor treatment by managers and executives, the documentary also focused on Brandy Melville’s production process. While clothes from the brand bear the tag “made in Italy,” further investigation into the company reveals that it outsources much of its textile manufacturing to sweatshops in the Tuscan city of Prato — a region dominated by unethical business practices and what Prato police call slave labor. Brandy Melville is known for its prices usually under $50, which is only achieved through a continuous trend focused production cycle known as fast fashion. (Essentially cheap clothes on demand). But while clothes stay cheap, workers are underpaid. And the excess of brands like Brandy Melville are eventually dumped in countries in the global south like Ghana, where clothes waste has turned their oceans and waterways into dumping grounds. “In the fast fashion conversation for many years, it was ‘If you critique fast fashion, you hate poor people,’” fashion and sustainability expert Aja Barber previously told Rolling Stone. “But that narrative completely erases the fact that the poorest people in the conversation are the garment workers, millions of [whom] make our clothing and aren’t paid fair wages. You’re using poor people as a scapegoat if you can’t see the poorest people in the equation.”

While Brandy Hellville systematically details how the brand allegedly exploited workers and shoppers to make executives more money, an important aspect of the story is that Brandy’s lack of accountability has only furthered the company’s financial gain. After the 2021 Insider expose, Brandy Melville temporarily restricted comments on their social media accounts, but continued selling clothes without an apology or acknowledgement, a strategy that’s allowed the brand to avoid accountability at all turns. “They’re not hypocrites because they’re exactly who they say they are,” Insider reporter Kate Taylor says in the documentary. “They’re just racist sexist pigs.”

But Orner hopes that the documentary will add more pressure on both the company and consumers to reevalute their purchase. 

“Right now it feels unstoppable, and the only way to have an impact is to stop buying their clothes,” Taylor told The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s all in the hands of young women. Young women have the power, so they can be creating content about this. They can be talking about it online and in person, and they can stop shopping there.” 

More Stories

The Best World Cup Songs — And the Ones You May Have Forgotten

Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images; Stuart Franklin/Getty Images; Jean Catuffe/Getty Images

The Best World Cup Songs — And the Ones You May Have Forgotten

Over the years, the songs that provide a soundtrack to the World Cup have become a significant part of the tournament, almost as important as the games. Some anthems have reached far beyond the field to offer a true moment of unity (“Cup of Life,” anyone?) As the 2026 games kick off, we surveyed all of the official FIFA songs and anthems (not soundtrack singles) since 1990, and highlighted the most inescapable bops, along with some that may have gotten lost to time. Check them out below.

‘The Time of Our Lives,’ Il Divo feat. Toni Braxton (2006)

Multi-Grammy Award winner Toni Braxton (C) performs "The Time of Our Lives," the official song of the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany, at the opening festivities at Munich's World Cup Stadium ahead of the opening 2006 World Cup match between host Germany and Costa Rica, 09 June 2006. Germany went on to win the opening match 4-2. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SCHMIDT (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images)ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images

For the 2006 tournament, held in Germany, European classical group Il Divo and R&B icon Toni Braxton leaned into their strengths as musicians with a ballad-like entry into World Cup anthems, switching up the format of hype-up tracks. Against the swell of an orchestra, their voices unite to sing about the “glory and the pain” of making it to the big game.

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift and Haim Sisters Sport ‘Stevie Knicks’ Shirts at Knicks Final Game

Taylor Swift at Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the New York Knicks on June 10, 2026 in New York City.

Dustin Satloff/Getty Images

Taylor Swift and Haim Sisters Sport ‘Stevie Knicks’ Shirts at Knicks Final Game

Taylor Swift, who’s been spotted sitting courtside at Knicks games in the past, showed her support for New York’s team while wearing a “Stevie Knicks” tee alongside Alana and Este Haim when she arrived at Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday. The Knicks are playing against the San Antonio Spurs.

Swift was often seen at Knicks games in the mid 2010s. More recently, the singer and her football-playing fiancé, Travis Kelce, were spotted sitting courtside at the Eastern Conference Finals in May when the Knicks were playing the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hulk Hogan Cause of Death Revealed as Florida Police Investigation Closes

Hulk Hogan at the ITV Studios in London, England.

Alex Huckle/GC Images

Hulk Hogan Cause of Death Revealed as Florida Police Investigation Closes

Hulk Hogan died of natural causes, according to a report by Florida police that officially closes the investigation into the wrestler’s death.

Per a 72-page report released on Friday by the Clearwater Police Department that includes medical records, statements, and surveillance footage, “There has been no evidence to indicate the death of Terry Bollea was anything other than natural.” The report stated: “Through the course of the investigation, there has been no evidence to indicate any criminal wrongdoing related to his death. This case will be closed, and will be considered solved, non-criminal.”

Keep ReadingShow less
From Celebrity to Empire: How Brand Deals Work and Why the Fine Print Matters

From Celebrity to Empire: How Brand Deals Work and Why the Fine Print Matters

Drake has a bourbon. Wayne Gretzky has a winery and distillery. Céline Dion has perfumes. Justin Bieber co-created a line of Timbits with Tim Hortons. Ryan Reynolds invested in and sold a gin business. And don’t get me started on the number of celebrities who attempted to launch a cannabis brand.

Canada has produced a remarkable number of global cultural icons, and some have managed to follow a particular playbook – build the fame, then monetize it through brand extensions, equity stakes, licensing arrangements, and product partnerships. The press releases are always celebratory.

Keep ReadingShow less
Philanthropy and Partying Meet at Les Printemps du MAC

Philanthropy and Partying Meet at Les Printemps du MAC

On May 29, the Fondation du Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal will hold the 18th edition of Les Printemps du MAC at Place Ville Marie.

Under the theme Carpe Noctem, the fundraising event will bring together contemporary art, music, and nightlife, while supporting Habiter le MAC, the MAC’s new career development program.

Keep ReadingShow less