Megyn Kelly Challenges Versace’s Fashion Choices and Inclusivity Efforts

Megyn Kelly Challenges Versace's Fashion Choices and Inclusivity Efforts

Versace Just Became The New Bud Light After Partnering With Dylan Mulvaney, And Megyn Kelly Is Leading The Charge Against Them

Another day, another woke corporation decides to thumb its nose at women and biology. Versace has apparently not been paying attention to the absolute shellacking that Bud Light took after partnering with trans-TikToker Dylan Mulvaney. Now, the luxury fashion brand is stepping into the same minefield by featuring Mulvaney in their women’s line promotions, and Megyn Kelly isn’t having any of it. The outspoken commentator has declared war on Versace, warning they’re about to learn the same expensive lesson that cost Anheuser-Busch billions in market value.

The Latest Brand To Ignore The Bud Light Lesson

You’d think that after watching Bud Light’s sales plummet, its marketing executives get fired, and its parent company hemorrhage billions in value, other corporations might take a hint. But apparently, Versace believes their customer base is just dying to see a biological male prancing around in their women’s clothing line. Kelly, host of “The Megyn Kelly Show” on YouTube and SiriusXM, didn’t mince words when she saw Mulvaney’s latest corporate partnership, posting on social media: “Versace you are our new Bud Lite.”

This isn’t Kelly’s first rodeo when it comes to calling out the absurdity of corporations pandering to the trans agenda. She’s been a vocal critic of how companies are falling over themselves to appear “inclusive” while alienating their core customer base – you know, the folks who actually buy their products with hard-earned money instead of just virtue-signaling on TikTok.

Mulvaney’s Growing List of Corporate Enablers

Dylan Mulvaney has managed to cash in on the “Days of Girlhood” schtick to the tune of over $1 million in brand deals. Beyond the infamous Bud Light partnership that led to Kid Rock literally shooting cases of beer in protest, Mulvaney has snagged deals with Nike, Kate Spade, Ulta Beauty, and CeraVe. Each partnership seems more absurd than the last, with perhaps the peak being Nike having Mulvaney promote women’s sports bras – an item the influencer has no biological need for.

“Nike sponsoring Dylan Mulvaney now for a f–king sports bra”

Kelly rightfully pointed out the insanity of having someone without female anatomy promote female products: “Dylan’s been taking some sort of a hormone that has turned Dylan into some … I don’t know what’s happening there, but those are not breasts.” She further highlighted the double standard at play, noting that “If there were a woman who looked like that, she couldn’t get an endorsement because they say she clearly is unwell.”

The Shifting Landscape of Consumer Power

What the marketing geniuses at these companies fail to understand is that traditional Americans still make up the backbone of consumer spending in this country. While the Twitter mob might give corporations a pat on the head for being “allies,” everyday Americans vote with their wallets. Bud Light learned this lesson the hard way, facing not just a social media backlash but actual bomb threats to their facilities after their Mulvaney campaign.

“If there were a woman who looked like that, she couldn’t get an endorsement because they say she clearly is unwell”

Kelly’s critics argue that Versace, being a high-end fashion brand, caters to a different demographic than Bud Light and may not see the same impact from conservative boycotts. But they’re missing the point. The issue isn’t about left versus right politics – it’s about the majority of Americans being tired of having ideology shoved down their throats when they just want to buy a product. It’s about respecting biological reality and not mocking women by suggesting that womanhood is just a costume anyone can put on.

Corporate America’s Identity Crisis

The fashion world has always pushed boundaries, but there’s a difference between avant-garde designs and erasing the very concept of womanhood. Versace isn’t making some bold artistic statement here – they’re just the latest company to cave to pressure from a vocal minority. Kelly’s warning should be taken seriously because it doesn’t just represent her opinion; it represents the sentiments of millions of Americans who are increasingly fed up with being told their values are outdated.

“Versace you are our new Bud Lite.”

Mulvaney, who only started “transitioning” during the COVID pandemic and now has over 10 million TikTok followers, represents a trend in corporate America of valuing fad over substance. The willingness of major brands to hitch their wagons to someone who has been publicly presenting as a woman for such a short time, while ignoring the concerns and feelings of biological women, reveals how far we’ve fallen as a culture. It’s no longer about selling products – it’s about selling an ideology, and Americans are getting tired of buying it.