Can Victoria's Secret Survive In A Post-#MeToo World?
Grazia|December 2018

The brand returned last month with angel wings, push-up bras and gym-honed bodies. But what does the world’s biggest fashion show mean for women now? Hannah Flint reports from New York.

Hannah Flint
Can Victoria's Secret Survive In A Post-#MeToo World?

I’m standing backstage at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show in New York amid a sea of pink. The world’s top models are in silky black dressing gowns and only just-concealed push-up bras. All around me, an army of make-up artists and hairstylists tend to the Hadids, Kendall Jenner and Stella Maxwell as they prepare to walk in the biggest fashion event of the year.

For every model here (60 walked on the day), this is the single most significant date in their calendar. If that sounds overblown, see Gigi Hadid, who has labelled Victoria’s Secret ‘forever and always the show of my dreams’, or Adriana Lima, who walked for the final time after 19 years, and who has described it as ‘the highlight of my life’.

Earlier this year, when Winnie Harlow announced she would be joining the cast for the first time, she posted a video on Instagram crying tears of joy. “Thank you so much to my fans who have been pushing me forward to this point in my career,’ she wrote. “I’m so blessed thank you Lord!!!”

But why is it such a big deal? “It’s a pinnacle in every model’s career,” says Winnie. “There’s not a model you can ask that doesn’t want VS. There have been so many legendary people before us, who we’ve looked up to. To be able to walk in their footsteps is legendary for our own career.”

This story is from the December 2018 edition of Grazia.

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This story is from the December 2018 edition of Grazia.

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