Sydney Sweeney and the Naked Truth of Modern Celebrity
- - Sydney Sweeney and the Naked Truth of Modern Celebrity
Louis StaplesJanuary 30, 2026 at 2:04 AM
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Sydney Sweeney and the Naked Truth of Modern Celebrity Ellen Von Unwerth / Getty
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Sydney Sweeney is a marketing machine. Since she became a household name, the actor has partnered with a seemingly endless list of brands that include Miu Miu, Guess, Samsung, Ford, Baskin & Robbins, KĂ©rastase, and Armani Beauty. Some of her endorsements have been, shall we say, unexpected. In 2024 she was announced as the global spokeswoman, or âdirector of Dude,â for HeyDude, a brand best known for its boat shoes.
Now, Sweeney is launching her own brand. Syrn (pronounced âsirenâ) is a lingerie brand for bodies who are traditionally underserved. The initial launch includes a collection of lace-trimmed underwear and comfortable bras in a range of 44 sizes (30B to 42DDD), most of which are under $100. This new venture reveals the naked truth about modern celebrity, where creating art is a stepping stone to releasing a productâand, hopefully, making bank.
Sweeneyâs penchant for endorsements has not gone unnoticed. âIt seems like sheâs not ashamed or embarrassed by promoting all of these different projects,â Priya Rao, the executive editor of The Business of Fashion, told the New York Times last year. âHistorically, celebrities were taught it was tacky to do too much, to be everywhere all at once.â Rao is correct that the previous approach to endorsements was âless is moreââfewer deals with bigger brands. But then reality TV and social media came along, creating the âattention economy,â where even negative attention can be converted to engagement and profit.
Last summer, we saw this cycle in action when Sweeneyâs campaign for American Eagle sparked weeks of fraught online discourse. The ads were accused of nodding to white supremacist language, which made the podcast-pilled MAGA right (briefly) rally around her. Suddenly, she was the one being endorsedâby President Trump, no less. In the midst of the debacle, American Eagleâs stock surged by 24 percent.
Kim Kardashian and her siblings created the blueprint for this new era, where stardom is all about being seen as much as possible. Like Sweeney, Kardashian endorsed many brands and products before fronting her own: First, a bizarrely lucrative mobile game, then her own beauty and fragrance brands, and finally the moment she hit the jackpot: Skims, the shapewear brand currently valued at $5 billion. It is no coincidence that Kardashianâs billion-dollar breakthrough was with a brand that centered her body, which has been constantly fixated upon, vilified, idolized, and objectified. With Syrn, Sweeney seems to be taking control of the internetâs absurd obsession with her breasts by monetizing it herself, while alsoâbut also attempting to become a serious entrepreneur by filling a need in the market.
The main difference between these women is that Kardashian used business as a way of demanding legitimacy in an industry where she was originally derided for not having a âtalent.â But even Sweeneyâs detractors would be foolish to argue that sheâs not talented. Why is a gifted actor emulating a reality star?
Two words: money, honey. Back in 2022, as Sweeneyâs star was rising, she got her first taste of controversy when she spoke about her finances in a Hollywood Reporter interview. She said she worked so muchâon HBO dramas Euphoria and The White Lotus, and the made-for-airplane rom-com Anyone But Youâ because she couldnât afford not to. Unlike the nepo babies surrounding her, she didnât come from generational wealth. This prompted online backlash, but itâs factually true that Hollywood stardom doesnât pay like it did in the 2000s and 1990s. (Unless youâre willing to do back-to-back Marvel moviesâor whatever it is Dwayne Johnson actually does.)
The unspoken truth of celebrity today is that you no longer get rich richânever have to work again wealthyâby making art. Thatâs probably why Rihanna has spent the last decade working on beauty and fashion brands instead of releasing new music, and why Ryan Reynolds is investing in soccer clubs, F1 teams, tech companies, and gin brands, rather than filming a sequel to The Proposal. (One day, our prayers will be answered.) Kardashian became a billionaire years before her one-time nemesis Taylor Swift, who is quite possibly the most commercialized musician in the world, and even BeyoncĂ©, who is approaching 30 years of pop stardom. The new dream is to use your celebrity to found a billion-dollar brand then ride off into the sunset.
Amy Sussman - Getty Images
Might Syrn become the next celebrity mega-brand? Iâm not the intended market, of course, but I canât escape the feeling that it feels a little rushed. The logo, in particular, looks like a detox smoothie brandâa pyramid scheme that would trick your auntie into investing her life savings after spending too much time on Facebook. Still, the brand reportedly has the backing of Jeff Bezos, one of the worldâs richest people. And at this point, itâs obvious that one of Sweeneyâs core talents is generating attentionâthatâs a very valuable skill.
Iâm not calling her out here, by the way. Hollywood is notorious for putting talented women out to pasture, and there seems to be a wider acceptance of celebrities selling out these days. (Perhaps itâs a ârecession indicatorâ?). Besides, after a period where Sweeney has hurtled between being accused of endorsing eugenics, a brutal box office flop, and most recently The Housemaid becoming an unexpected commercial smash, sheâs learning that Hollywood stardom is unpredictable. But mogul-dom? That might be a smoother ride.
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ