Women’s Swimwear Company Names ‘Non-Binary’ Biological Male As New Brand Ambassador

A famed Australian women’s swimwear company has named a “non-binary” biological male as its new brand ambassador after previously using supermodels like Gigi Hadid and Miranda Kerr.

The Women’s Swimwear Brand Seafolly recently announced Australian activist Deni Todorovič would be the brand’s first transgender ambassador, and the news was met with a mix of reactions, News.com AU reported.

Deni made the announcement on Instagram, writing “we made history! This marks the first time iconic Aussie swim giants Seafolly have worked with a Trans ambassador/brand partner. As the Chief Marketing Officer said in our initial meeting, it’s the first time of many more to come. I couldn’t be more honored.”

This Australian non-binary man, Deni Todorovič, is the new brand ambassador and model for Women’s Swimwear Brand Seafolly. 👙🩱

The brands previous brand ambassadors included Gigi Hadid and Miranda Kerr.

After the brand received backlash for featuring a man in their campaign… pic.twitter.com/0bHEWEsL0n

— Oli London (@OliLondonTV) April 5, 2023

The brand also posted the news, and the label was met with a host of comments — many from people who were upset about the use of a biological male as brand ambassador instead of a female, the outlet noted. The comments have since been turned off on the post.

Following a backlash against the brand, Seafolly released a statement against what it called “hateful language,” Sky News noted.

“We are here to celebrate the Australian beach lifestyle and inspire one another to feel confident at the beach,” Seafolly said in a statement.

“In this community, we do not tolerate abusive, offensive, hateful language, trolling, deliberate disruption of discussion, or spam,” the statement added. “Please be respectful of each other’s differences and remember to always be kind.”

Deni also released a statement that the activist wasn’t taking jobs from “biological women.”

“First of all, I’m not a man pretending to be a woman, not even close,” the model wrote. “Second of all, I’m not trying to steal jobs from women, at all, there were many women involved in that campaign.”

“There were also queer people involved in that campaign, like Thomas who designed (the swimsuit), like me who is non-binary,” the model added. “We miss out on jobs all the time, so let’s just have a bit of nuance before you f***ing troll me like this.”

The iconic Australian brand has been around since the 1970s with ambassadors such as Lara Bingle, Jesinta Franklin, Sports Illustrated Swimsuit models, and Victoria’s Secret models.

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