Dov Charney Explained

Dov Charney
Birth Date:31 January 1969
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Dov Charney (born January 31, 1969) is a Canadian entrepreneur and clothing manufacturer. He is the CEO of Yeezy and the founder of American Apparel,[1] which was one of the largest garment manufacturers in the United States until its bankruptcy in 2015.[2] Charney was fired from American Apparel due to numerous allegations including sexual harassment, racism, and sexual assault.[3] Charney subsequently founded Los Angeles Apparel.[4]

Early life

Charney was born in Montreal, Quebec on January 31, 1969.[5] His parents, Morris, an architect, and his mother, Sylvia, an artist of Syrian descent, divorced when he was young.[6] [7] [8] Charney is a nephew of architect Moshe Safdie.[9] Charney is dyslexic and was diagnosed with ADD in kindergarten.

He attended Choate Rosemary Hall, a private boarding school in Connecticut[10] and St. George's School of Montreal.[11] According to Charney, he was heavily influenced by both Montreal culture and his own Jewish heritage.[9] [12]

While attending high school in the United States, Charney began importing Hanes and Fruit of the Loom t-shirts from the U.S. to his friends in Canada. In an interview with Vice, he described smuggling the shirts on Amtrak trains from New York to Montreal.[13]

American Apparel

Charney began selling t-shirts under the American Apparel name in 1989.[14] In 1990, he dropped out of Tufts University, borrowed $10,000 from his parents and established American Apparel in South Carolina.[15] Over the next several years, he spent time learning about manufacturing and wholesale before moving to Los Angeles in the mid-'90s. By 1997, Charney had moved all manufacturing into a factory located in downtown Los Angeles.[16] American Apparel products were marketed towards "young metropolitan adults."[17]

The company had about $12 million in sales by 2001. In 2003, Charney opened the first store in L.A.'s Echo Park neighborhood, followed by one each in New York and Montreal. Within two years, the company had expanded to Europe and opened 65 new stores. By 2006, there were 140 total stores.[18]

In 2009, it expanded to 281 total retail locations, making it "the fastest retail roll-out in American history."[19] In 2014, the company reported record sales of $634 million.

Ad campaigns

American Apparel under Charney's leadership was known for its simple and provocative ads, which rarely used professional models and whom were often chosen personally by Charney from local hangouts and stores.[20] He shot many of the advertisements himself[21] and was criticized for featuring models in sexually provocative poses. The campaigns were also lauded for honesty and lack of airbrushing.[22] [23]

In 2012, the company made headlines when it debuted an ad campaign featuring 62-year-old model Jacky O'Shaughnessy.[24]

American Apparel again stirred controversy in 2014 when they displayed mannequins with pubic hair in the window of their Lower East Side store. The company told Elle Magazine:[25]

Activism

Legalize LA

See main article: Legalize LA. Legalize LA was an immigration reform campaign conceived by Charney and promoted by American Apparel beginning in 2004. The campaign featured billboards and full-page ads, as well as t-shirts with the words "Legalize LA." Proceeds from the sale of the shirts were donated to immigration reform advocacy groups. The campaign called for the overhaul of immigration laws so as to create a legal path for undocumented workers to gain citizenship in the United States.[26] [27]

Legalize Gay

In November 2008, after the passing of Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriages in California, Dov Charney and American Apparel created "Legalize Gay" T-shirts to hand out to protesters at rallies. The positive reaction led American Apparel to sell the same shirts in stores and online.[28]

Factory conditions

In an interview with Vice.tv, Charney spoke out against the poor treatment of fashion workers in developing countries and refers to the practices as "slave labor" and "death trap manufacturing." Charney proposed a "Global Garment Workers Minimum Wage" and discussed many of the inner workings of the modern fast fashion industry practices that creates dangerous factory conditions and disasters.[29]

Charney's own factories have been heavily scrutinized for labor violations. In 2020, public health officials ordered the shut-down of Los Angeles Apparel due to "flagrant violations of mandatory public health infection control orders." Charney was able to sidestep the initial lockdown measures and keep employees from unemployment benefits by reopening as an essential business making and selling masks. 300 workers were infected with COVID-19 and 4 workers died before the factory was ordered to close.[30]

Workers were also made to sign agreements releasing Charney and American Apparel from all legal claims against him or the company. These claims forced employees to go through mandatory arbitration, an internal process, and prevented lawsuits alleging workplace abuse from entering the public court system.

Termination

American Apparel publicly suspended Charney on 18 June 2014, stating that they would terminate him for cause in 30 days. The termination letter given to Charney alleged that he had engaged in conduct that repeatedly put himself in a position to be sued by numerous former employees for claims that include harassment, discrimination, and assault.[4]

Paula Schneider, who took over as company CEO, stated that Charney was fired for violating sexual harassment and anti-discrimination policies and for misuse of corporate assets.[31]

Charney was "blindsided" by news of his termination, calling it a "coup." In court filings by his attorneys, it was alleged that the American Apparel CFO had planned to oust Charney, and that he was persuaded to sign a disastrous settlement that left him with no job and no control of the company, despite being the largest shareholder. Charney alleged that the investigation was biased on the grounds that it was conducted by those who benefitted from an outcome that weighed in their favor. Charney asserted that he has never been charged with any crime or found guilty or liable for any of the accusations against him.

In December 2014, Charney was terminated as a chief executive officer after months of suspension. In December 2014, Charney told Bloomberg Businessweek he was down to his last $100,000 and that he was sleeping on a friend's couch in Manhattan.[32] Following his suspension as CEO in the summer of 2014, Charney teamed up with the Standard General hedge fund to buy stocks of the company to attempt a takeover.[33] In 2016, American Apparel board dismissed a $300 million offer from Hagan Group that pushed for Charney's comeback.[34]

In the wake of his dismissal, reports of Charney's management style emerged. Business Inside stated that Charney was unable to install a mature operational infrastructure to keep the company running smoothly, and didn't establish management bench strength for American Apparel. Andrew Ross Sorkin, writing for the New York Times stated that Charney "should have been gone long ago, face of the brand or not."[35]

Los Angeles Apparel

In 2016, Charney founded Los Angeles Apparel. He opened its first factory in South Central Los Angeles, with aims of replicating the successes he experienced in the 1990s with supplying wholesale clothing. The origins are similar to those he deployed while expanding American Apparel.[36] When interviewed by Vice News regarding his new venture, Charney said, "my previous company had an effect on the culture of young adults...I want to reconnect and do that again before I die".[37]

The company grew to over 350 staff during the second year of operation. During an interview with Bloomberg, Charney drew comparisons to the growth he experienced with American Apparel calling it the equivalent of "year eight". Charney expected the fashion line to grow to $20 million in revenue by 2018.

Similar to American Apparel, the manufacturing of all Los Angeles Apparel garments are kept in the US to maintain low lead times and offer better completion times than overseas competitors.[38]

Following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, Charney repurposed his business operations to help increased demand for PPE (Personal Protective Equipment).[39] According to the Los Angeles Times, Charney spotted shortages as early as February and this is when his apparel company began to consider manufacturing face masks.[40]

Charney was interviewed in March 2020 by a number of media outlets, speaking about his desire to turn Los Angeles Apparel into a medical equipment manufacturer during the pandemic. Los Angeles Apparel then began manufacturing face masks and medical gowns at the facility in South Central. Charney told The New York Times that he aimed to create 300,000 masks and 50,000 gowns each week.[41] In an interview, Charney said he was "losing money on the venture," as he was giving many of them away.[42]

In 2020, public health officials ordered the shut-down of Los Angeles Apparel due to "flagrant violations of mandatory public health infection control orders." Charney was able to sidestep the initial lockdown measures and keep employees from unemployment benefits by reopening as an essential business making and selling masks. 300 workers were infected with COVID-19 and 4 workers were killed before the factory was ordered to close.

Allegations of sexual harassment and assault

Charney has been the subject of several sexual harassment lawsuits, at least five since the mid-2000s, including allegations of sexual harassment, sexual assault, racist remarks, and abusive behavior against numerous employees.[43] [44] [45] [46] He has been accused of sexually harassing employees as young as 17.[47] Due to employees signing documents revoking legal claims against Charney or the company, many lawsuits were thrown out by the courts and had to go through internal arbitration at American Apparel.

Charney denied the allegations, accusing lawyers in the lawsuits against American Apparel of extortion.[48] [49] [50] [51] [52] Charney has said numerous times that he sees no problem with sexually pursuing his employees.[53]

In 2004, Claudine Ko of Jane magazine[54] published an essay narrating that Charney began masturbating in front of her while she was interviewing him.[55] [56] [57] The article's publication brought extensive press to Charney. In a follow-up to her first article, Ko wrote that her article had been misconstrued, stating that her encounter with Charney "was being used to feed a flawed cliche where men are evil and omnipotent while women are mute victims lacking free will." She further questioned the notion that she had been taken advantage of: "Who was really exploited? We both were—American Apparel got press, I got one hell of a story. And that's it." Ko did not ever claim Charney masturbating in front of her was consensual.[58]

Personal life

Charney lives in Garbutt House, a mansion atop a hill in Silver Lake.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023-06-27 . Somehow, Kanye Found Someone Worse to Be YEEZY CEO . 2024-04-26 . . en.
  2. Web site: 2010-08-25. The rise and fall of American Apparel. 2020-10-25. the Guardian. en.
  3. Web site: Hsu . Tiffany . Khouri . Andrew . June 23, 2015 . American Apparel makes graphic allegations about former CEO . Los Angeles Times.
  4. Web site: Edwards. Jim. Inside the 'conspiracy' that forced Dov Charney out of American Apparel. 2021-01-24. Business Insider.
  5. News: Holson . Laura . 13 April 2011 . He's Only Just Begun to Fight . THe New York Times . 2 May 2011.
  6. http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/preview.php?id=14419 Jewish Journal, Unfashionable Crisis, 29 July 2005
  7. Web site: Charney . Dov . Here's The Autobiography Of The Controversial CEO American Apparel Just Fired . 2024-02-19 . Business Insider . en-US.
  8. News: Holson . Laura M. . 2011-04-13 . He's Only Just Begun to Fight . 2024-02-19 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  9. News: Silcoff. Mireille. A real shirt-disturber: Dov Charney conquered America with his fitted t-shirts and posse of strippers.. Saturday Post. 6 April 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080506091645/http://www.debonairmag.com/an_interview_with_american_apparel_founder_dov_charney_/2.htm. 6 May 2008.
  10. News: Haskell. Kari. 18 September 2006. An Interview With American Apparel Founder Dov Charney. Debonair Magazine. dead. 24 December 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20080406014834/http://www.debonairmag.com/an_interview_with_american_apparel_founder_dov_charney_/2.htm. 6 April 2008.
  11. http://www.stgeorges.qc.ca/site/develop3.htm St. George Alumni
  12. Web site: Dov Charney at McGill . Morissette, Caroline . Bull and Bear . 1 April 2005 . 28 December 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140204031005/http://bullandbear.musonline.com/2005/04/dov-charney-at-mcgill/ . 4 February 2014 . dead .
  13. Web site: Friedersdorf. Conor. June 5, 2013. How the Head of American Apparel Got His Start: Smuggling Tees into Canada on Amtrak. The Atlantic.
  14. Web site: Lewis. Tanya. CORPORATE CASE STUDY: Big-mouthed, big-hearted leader brings apparel outfit notoriety. 2020-10-30. www.prweek.com.
  15. Web site: Dov Charney's American Dream: The rise, fall and comeback of an apparel empire. 2020-10-30. Retail Dive. en-US.
  16. Web site: Segment of Modern Marvels: Cotton. The History Channel via AmericanApparel.net. 25 November 2007. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20071221075509/http://americanapparel.net/gallery/modernmarvels/qt.html. 21 December 2007.
  17. News: Jamie Wolf. 23 April 2006. And You Thought Abercrombie & Fitch Was Pushing It?. The New York Times Magazine. 25 November 2007.
  18. Web site: 2017-08-20. American Apparel: The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of an All-American Business. 2020-11-23. The Fashion Law. en-US.
  19. Web site: Dov Charney's American Dream: The rise, fall and comeback of an apparel empire. 2020-11-23. Retail Dive. en-US.
  20. News: Rapoport. Adam. June 2004. 29 March 2008-->. T (Shirts) and A. GQ. "What makes American Apparel's female models so appealing is that most of them are not models. They are girls whom Charney meets at bars, restaurants, trade shows—pretty much anywhere."
  21. News: Palmeri. Christopher. 27 June 2005. Living on the Edge at American Apparel. Businessweek. dead. 22 March 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080324164632/http://businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_26/b3939108_mz017.htm. 24 March 2008. "Charney takes many of the photos himself, often using company employees as models as well as people he finds on the street."
  22. News: Stossel. John. 2 December 2005. Sexy Sweats Without the Sweatshop. ABC News. 21 March 2008.
  23. News: Morford. Mark. 24 June 2005. Porn Stars in My Underwear. San Francisco Chronicle. dead. 21 March 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080310072528/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=%2Fgate%2Farchive%2F2005%2F06%2F24%2Fnotes062405.DTL. 10 March 2008.
  24. Web site: Chernikoff. Leah Rose. 2014-02-19. "Legs in the Air? Great, Let's Go": Jacky O'Shaughnessy on Modeling for American Apparel at 62. 2020-11-23. ELLE. en-US.
  25. Web site: Matthews . Natalie . 2014-01-16 . American Apparel Tells Us Why They're Using Mannequins With Pubic Hair . 2020-11-23 . ELLE . en-US.
  26. News: 28 October 2008. American Apparel takes stand on immigration. Reuters.
  27. News: Story. Louise. 18 January 2008. Politics Wrapped in a Clothing Ad. The New York Times.
  28. Web site: American Apparel Legalize Gay . unfit . https://archive.today/20110705061630/http://www.americanapparel.net/legalizegay/ . 5 July 2011 . October 26, 2023 . Legalize Gay.
  29. Web site: VICE. 29 May 2013. Dov Charney on Modern Day Sweat Shops: VICE Podcast 006. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/CG_T1fY3KTk . 2021-12-21 . live. 31 January 2014. YouTube.
  30. Web site: Gibson . Kate . July 13, 2020 . Los Angeles Apparel's factory shut after 300 workers contract coronavirus . CBS News.
  31. Web site: Former American Apparel CEO Dov Charney Speaks Out for First Time Since Ouster. 2021-01-24. ABC News. en.
  32. News: 2014-12-22. American Apparel Founder Says He's Down to Last $100,000. en. Bloomberg.com. 2021-01-24.
  33. Web site: Peterson. Hayley. Ousted American Apparel CEO Dov Charney Claims He Was Robbed By A Hedge Fund. 2021-01-24. Business Insider.
  34. Web site: 2016-01-15. What happened when Dov Charney tried to get American Apparel back. 2021-01-24. The Independent. en.
  35. Web site: Sorkin . Andrew Ross . Realizing the American Apparel Chief, Dov Charney, Isn't Wearing Any Clothes . DealBook . 2014-06-24 . 2022-10-07.
  36. News: Townsend. Matthew. 12 July 2017. Dov Charney Couldn't Keep American Apparel, So He Restarted It. Bloomberg.
  37. News: Derrick. Jayson. 2017-09-14. Remember American Apparel's Dov Charney? He's Back With A New Business Idea. 2021-01-30. Benzinga. en.
  38. Web site: Abarbanel. Aliza. Dov Charney Is Back Making Sexualized Basics. 2021-01-30. www.refinery29.com. en.
  39. How your business can help fight coronavirus: One brand's pivot to making masks . . 23 March 2020.
  40. News: Schmidt . Ingrid . Fashion brands are making face masks, medical gowns for the coronavirus crisis . . 24 March 2020.
  41. News: Testa . Jessica . Christian Siriano and Dov Charney Are Making Masks and Medical Supplies Now . . 21 March 2020.
  42. Web site: Pierce . Tony . Dov Charney's New Passion: Face Masks . 2 April 2020 . Los Angeleno.
  43. News: Dov Charney of American Apparel Named in Harassment Suit . The New York Times . Laura M. . Holson . 23 March 2011.
  44. News: Brennan . Ed . Woody Allen reaches $5m settlement with head of American Apparel . . 18 May 2009 . 22 May 2009. London. Quote: "Charney has been involved in several highly-publicised sexual harassment suits brought by former employees, none of which were proven."
  45. News: Sefton . Eliot . Dov Charney's LA-based clothing company loses 1,600 staff and sees yet another advert banned . Charney has been the subject of several, unproven, sexual harassment suits and claims to have been victimised by the media in the past. He said that he used Woody Allen in his company's ads because he wanted to draw attention to the way he and Allen—both high-profile Jews—had been treated. . . 3 September 2009 . 11 September 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090908053154/http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/53092%2Cnews%2Cdov-charneys-american-apparel-in-trouble-over-immigration-and-underage-ad-la-based-clothing-label . 8 September 2009 .
  46. Web site: American Apparel CEO Dov Charney's 'Sex Slave' Lawsuit Thrown Out . The Huffington Post . 22 March 2012 . 17 November 2016.
  47. Web site: Goldhill . Olivia . 20 June 2014 . Sacked American Apparel boss: the exploits that didn't get him fired . The Telegraph.
  48. https://www.cnbc.com/id/47007775/American_Apparel_CEO_Tattered_but_Not_Torn American Apparel CEO: Tattered, but Not Torn
  49. News: Holson. Laura. 13 April 2011. He's Only Just Begun to Fight. THe New York Times. 2 May 2011.
  50. News: Heller. Matthew. Fashion Mogul 'Fakes' Arbitration in Harassment Case. "The 'confidential arbitration' was in fact a charade. One of Nelson's attorneys, the 2nd District said, later described it as 'a 'fake arbitration' designed to produce a press release calculated to blunt negative media attention.'". On Point. 28 October 2008. 21 November 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20081204072823/http://www.onpointnews.com/081028.asp. 4 December 2008.
  51. News: Slater. Dan. The Story Behind American Apparel's Sham Arbitration. "The court went on to say that 'the proposed press release is materially misleading — among other things, no real arbitration of a dispute occurred and [the] plaintiff received $1.3 million in compensation.'". The Wall Street Journal. 4 November 2008. 5 November 2008.
  52. News: Ex-workers say American Apparel posted nude pix online. Reuters. April 2011. 2 May 2011.
  53. Web site: Freeman . Hadley . 10 September 2017 . American Apparel founder Dov Charney: 'Sleeping with people you work with is unavoidable' . The Guardian.
  54. News: Nesvig . Kara . Unkempt, Urban, Ubiquitous. . Minnesota Daily . 4 October 2007 . 28 April 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080420170359/http://www.mndaily.com/articles/2007/10/03/72163645 . 20 April 2008 . Archived at americanapparel.net
  55. Web site: Sexy marketing or sexual harassment? - Dateline NBC . https://web.archive.org/web/20130208015224/http://www.nbcnews.com/id/14082498 . dead . 8 February 2013 . NBC News . 28 July 2006 . 17 November 2016.
  56. News: 'Jewish hustler'—potty mouth and pervert—means no offense | The God Blog . . 3 June 2008 . 17 November 2016.
  57. Web site: american apparel . 17 November 2016 . Claudinenko.com.
  58. Web site: claudine ko - american apparel 2 . 2021-01-30 . www.claudineko.com.