'Next KKKatie' Just a Levi's Marketing Tool?

We may have been duped, folks. Elle Ko, the girl we thought might have been “the next KKKatie,” yesterday tweeted this casual plug for an upcoming Levi’s promotional event. Is there really a court date? Does Elle really exist? What used garment are you going to trade for trade for a brand-new pair of Levi’s?

Here is Elle’s Twitter, and here is Elle’s tweet.

Related:

KKKatie’s Court Date

And Just Like That, the Levi’s Workshop Is Gone

13 Responses to “'Next KKKatie' Just a Levi's Marketing Tool?”

  1. MrEricSir says:

    Hey Levi’s, I have a great idea for a promotion: re-opening your jeans factory in the Mission.

    • Rod says:

      everyone’s work is equally important, so long as that work is done in the third world under “slavelike” conditions (that’s how the US Dept of Labor has described the condition of Chinese Levi’s laborers.)

      why pay Americans when you can get slaves and then, rather than pass on the savings to your customers, use the profits to open an advertising storefront to attract rich, artsy kids who will buy your $60 jeans?

      • Um, actually, my Levi’s (505s) were made in Lesotho, and cost less than $35, and I’m about as far from a “rich, artsy kid” as it is possible to get. But carry on — don’t let facts get in the way of your cliches.

      • Rod says:

        i regret to be the one to inform you that the world does not revolve around you. the fact that you own a pair of cheap Levi’s that was made in Lesotho doesn’t somehow negate the fact that there are Levi’s that go for well over $60 and there are Levi’s that are made in sweatshops in China, among other places. but feel free to ignore any real facts you choose if it clears your conscience.

      • MrEricSir says:

        China, Lesotho… yeah I don’t think either of those places are in the Mission.

      • Like I said, fellas, enjoy your lefty cliches to the max! Why bother to do due diligence to make a real case, when you can just throw around a lot of ready-made talking points with the justification that it surely is true SOMEWHERE. Keep preaching to the choir, Fox News of the left.

        And, yes, my interest in the world around me pretty much does stop at the border of your sanctimony. If you want to call it something else, I guess that will work for you; I’m well aware that the world doesn’t revolve around me. Neither, for that matter, does it owe you any special attention unless you can make a real argument about the real world. New College rhetoric isn’t enough.

      • Rod says:

        aside from all the abstraction, what’s your real case here? it’s not too clear what you are arguing here, are you saying that it’s not fact that Levi’s has made jeans in China under poor conditions? or denying that there are Levi’s that there are Levi’s that cost $60? let’s actually talk about the facts.

        btw here’s a fun article about Levi’s practices in Lethoso: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article6736113.ece

      • I think it’s pretty clear that I’ve been mocking the carbon-paper lefty cant that you used in your initial reply to the original MM posting. That’s exactly the kind of crap that is so divorced from the niggling details of the real world that it turns people off from digging any deeper. So now we get a link to something more interesting… great, were you waiting for someone to beg?

        By the way, I’m still working-class, and I still have to buy $35 Levi’s, no matter where they were made.

  2. Sheabones says:

    Just buy vintage Levi’s. They’re cheaper, stronger, better looking, made in San Francisco and they won’t attract self-righteous PC posts on blogs.

  3. hoboking says:

    Since many people on this blog thread appear to know where bad jeans manufacturing practices take place, I’m wondering – who has the worst labor practices? The most heinous sweatshops? The most stomach churning abuses of their employees?

    I’d like to know so I can buy their jeans, I want to do my part in hastening the inevitable crisis of capitalism by pushing it to its logical limits of exploitation. Plus I bet they sell their jeans for the least money.

  4. a game says:

    Eyvallah hacı ya :)