Female Basketball Stars in the Skims Spotlight
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The branding of the W.N.B.A. as the hottest league in any game continues apace, as does the growing convergence of fashion and sports.
The latest step in the relationship: a Skims ad campaign released just ahead of the start of the women’s basketball season and featuring the rookie Cameron Brink, the newly retired three-time W.N.B.A. champion-turned-president of Adidas basketball Candace Parker and the All-Stars and Olympians Kelsey Plum of the Las Vegas Aces and Skylar Diggins-Smith of the Seattle Storm and DiJonai Carrington of the Connecticut Sun.
The campaign depicts the players in various skin-tone undies — bikini and high-waist briefs, boy shorts, bandeaus and T-shirts — accessorized with basketballs, high-heel pumps and elaborate rhinestone jewelry. It both toys with old pinup tropes and subverts them — the women look less come hither than don’t mess with me. It also frames Skims, which was founded by Kim Kardashian and Jens Grede in 2018 and valued at $4 billion last July, less as shapewear than haute sportswear.
It is the first Skims campaign to celebrate women players, following the brand’s last two big basketball moves: a similar shoot that introduced the Skims men’s line and featured Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder, among other athletes, and a campaign just in time for March Madness featuring male all-star college basketball players. (They were mostly in terry loungewear, not underwear.)
At the time, given the record-setting popularity of the women’s N.C.A.A. tournament, some fans criticized Skims for focusing on male athletes rather than women. This is the answer.