As a cis woman, Calvin Klein’s ad of a trans man in a bra doesn’t ‘confuse’ me

Bappie Kortram in the Calvin Klein campaign

Bappie Kortram, a trans man living in The Netherlands, was pictured posing in one of Calvin Klein’s iconic sports bras (Picture: Instagram/@tranyewest/@calvinklein)

Just when you think transphobia has reached its pinnacle, bigots on the internet threaten to boycott a brand because they dare to be more inclusive in their advertising.

This time it’s Calvin Klein who have faced the wrath of the gender criticals for *checks notes* using a person with breasts to model a bra.

Bappie Kortram, a trans man living in The Netherlands, was pictured posing in one of Calvin Klein’s iconic sports bras.

The brand faced criticism on social media, with some questioning whether they had alienated cisgender women from purchasing the bras in order to ‘appease a tiny minority’.

As a cisgender woman, I can confidently say that, yes, I have felt alienated by Calvin Klein’s advertising campaigns. Not the campaign including Bappie, mind you.

His photoshoot, alongside a female model, made me feel as though this brand was inclusive and catered for people who did not fit the underwear model stereotype.  

Bappie Kortram in the Calvin Klein campaign

Inclusion is not only good for the consumer, it’s generally good for business (Picture: Instagram/@tranyewest/@calvinklein)

Instead, it’s the decades of photoshoots that included stick-thin models with washboard abs and a thigh gap wider than my leg that have othered me.

In the past, I looked at these posters and billboards and decided this underwear was not for me. I was both too much and not enough for the Calvin Klein bra.

Then inclusive marketing came along and changed everything. As soon as I saw a plus-sized (and let’s face it, plus-sized is actually regular-sized) girl on the poster, I conceded that they might actually fit someone like me whose body broke the boundaries of sample size.

Inclusion is not only good for the consumer, it’s generally good for business. Letting more people know that a product can cater to their needs means more money in the bank.

Why then would critics accuse Calvin Klein of wanting to ‘go broke’?

In recent months, there has been a rise in violent and pathetic reactions to trans inclusion in brand advertising. Gender criticals, trans-exclusionists and a**eholes have pledged to boycott certain brands for including trans people in their marketing.

Several men took aim at cans of Bud Light and shot them in disgust (Picture: Instagram / @dylanmulvaney)

Nike, Bud Light and Olay have all faced criticism for having paid partnerships with transgender TikTok activist Dylan Mulvaney. Bearing in mind that these were not multi-million pound ad campaigns, but paid partnerships on her Instagram feed – designed mainly to be seen by people already following her – the response was outrageous.

For some, boycotting wasn’t enough. Several men took aim at cans of Bud Light and shot them in disgust.

The clips are harrowing. It’s disturbing to see a person brought to such anger and violence by something as harmless as a person drinking a can of beer. If they were willing to post such content on their public social media, imagine how they would treat a trans person in real life?

Many gender criticals claim to act in this way because they want to protect the rights of women. But this is why cisgender women like myself must do all that we can to show that we don’t need protection from trans people – we need it from lunatics who shoot a can of beer because they think it’s queer.

Bappie Kortam has done more to make me feel comfortable in Calvin Klein underwear than Kate Moss ever could.

One detractor of the campaign said: ‘For the life of me I cannot comprehend the fact that someone who does not have to wear a bra desperately desires to’. Tell that to the millions of teenage or pre-pubescent girls who feel pressured into wearing ‘training’ bras as they make their own transition through puberty.

As for the photo they were referring to, it was taken in 2022, before Kortram had top surgery to remove his breast tissue. He has breasts in the photo. He’s wearing a bra. What’s so difficult to understand?

Bappie Kortram in the Calvin Klein campaign

Ciswomen have a responsibility to stand up for our trans siblings (Picture: Instagram/@tranyewest/@calvinklein)

Trans inclusion in ad campaigns doesn’t negatively impact cisgender women because simply including one person does not mean you’re excluding someone else. It means that all have a seat at the table or a place on the billboard.

There’s a reason why trans women are the subject of the majority of transphobic discourse, because transphobia is so deeply rooted in misogyny. Why would someone assigned male at birth ever want to identify as feminine, ask the transphobes.

How dare a person assigned female at birth not conform to a patriarchal idea of femininity in order to be accepted.

Which is why ciswomen have a responsibility to stand up for our trans siblings, as we are all targets of misogynistic hatred and patriarchal ideology.

I will not be told by bigots that I must feel threatened by trans people, or that I’m being alienated and replaced against my will.

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