Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Designer Says Target 'Hasn't Tried To Contact Me Once' After Pulling Pride Designs From Shelves

Erik Carnell with Abprallen merchandise
@abprallenuk/Instagram

U.K.-based Abprallen designer Erik Carnell says he's 'very, very, very low priority' for Target as they face backlash from conservatives over their LGBTQ+ Pride merchandise.

On Tuesday, retail giant Target confirmed it would be making changes to this year's Pride collection, including moving many LGBTQ+ merchandise displays to the back of the store in many southern states.

According to one designer who was highly anticipating the inclusion of his merchandise in the Pride month displays, some items were moved off the floor—and the store's website—completely.


Queer artist and Abprallen designer Erik Carnell was commission to design items—a sweatshirt, bag and fanny pack—for Target's 2023 Pride collection...

... but he began to worry when he noticed negative online activity.

First, his items were being review-bombed by conservatives who were giving products one-star reviews. Then, he noticed his items were being removed from the website altogether.

Carnell revealed Target "hasn't even tried to contact me once."

In a statement released by Target, the decision to move merchandise was based on the safety of employees, the company claiming this year workers have been faced with threats.

The statement read:

"For more than a decade, Target has offered an assortment of products aimed at celebrating Pride Month."
"Since introducing this year's collection, we've experienced threats impacting our team members' sense of safety and well-being while at work."
"Given these volatile circumstances, we are making adjustments to our plans, including removing items that have been at the center of the most significant confrontational behavior."
"Our focus is now on moving forward with our continuing commitment to the LGBTQIA+ community and standing with them as we celebrate Pride Month and throughout the year."

Carnell understands Target's stance on employee safety but also thinks they could have been more proactive.

And they certainly should have communicated changes to design partners.

“Every so often, one or two or my products would be taken down from the website, or the link to my brand page… with no explanation or communication.”
“I think it was anticipated that there would be pushback, I don’t think anybody anticipated that it would be quite this extreme.”
“I think with Target, it’s very much a case of everyone scrambling to do what they think is the best thing for the next five minutes."
“I don’t think they have a plan for what they’re going to do going ahead with the rest of this collection."
“They’ve already taken down a number of Pride displays, mostly in the south, or moved into different areas [of the stores], instructing their employees to do this in the space of five or six hours.”

Carnell again emphasized he realizes Target's concern is for the safety of their employees.

“If I lived in a country where gun violence was as prevalent as in American and I owned a corporation like Target, I might also do what they’re doing.”

Many videos on social media show conservatives destroying Pride displays and badgering customers and employees alike.

WARNING: NSFW language


With that in mind, however, Carnell thinks big companies like Target need to take a stand with the LGBTQ+ community.

“I think that, with the current political climate in America, huge companies like Target absolutely need to take a very clear stand on how they feel about LGBTQ+ people. Walmart has a Pride collection as well, but that hasn’t seemed to receive any negative press.”

And people on social media agree.








Of course, some think it's fair of Target to make adjustments based on employee safety.



Carnell drove his message home:

“Ensuring trans people, particularly trans people of color are looked after and cared for, making sure that local queer clubs, bars, cafes are getting the funding that they need, I think that’s far more important right now.”

More from News/lgbtq

JD and Usha Vance
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Usha Vance Just Tried To Claim That JD Is The 'Nicest, Funniest Guy'—And Yeah, Nobody's Buying It

Second Lady Usha Vance had people rolling their eyes after she claimed during a sit-down interview with Fox News' Kayleigh McEnany that people don't know her husband, Vice President JD Vance, is actually the "nicest, funniest guy."

Mrs. Vance appeared on the network as critics raised concerns about President Donald Trump’s mental and physical health following another hospital visit and in the weeks before the publication of her husband's latest book.

Keep Reading Show less
Sterling K. Brown accepts the Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series Award for “Paradise” onstage during the 57th NAACP Image Awards.
Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET

Sterling K. Brown Just Expertly Broke Down Why Seasons Of TV Shows Nowadays Tend To Be So Short

If it feels like TV seasons are getting shorter, it’s because they are—and audiences have been side-eyeing the shift for years.

Now, Sterling K. Brown is stepping in with a clear-eyed breakdown of why fewer episodes have become the new normal.

Keep Reading Show less
Rick Scott
Leandro Lozada / AFP via Getty Images

MAGA Senator Gets Epic Reminder After He Shares Photo Of Himself On Vacation At Disney

Florida Republican Senator Rick Scott was called out for his hypocrisy after he proudly showed off a photo of himself at a Disney park amid TMZ's efforts to put members of Congress on blast for taking vacations during the partial government shutdown.

The shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is now the longest in history at more than 50 days and stretches on without an agreement between the House and the Senate now that lawmakers have left Washington for Easter break; neither chamber is set to return to Washington until the week of April 13.

Keep Reading Show less
Jameela Jamil
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty Images

Jameela Jamil Just Effortlessly Shut Down The Notion That Women Are 'Naturally Submissive'

During the Think Twice Show podcast that will be released on April 9, actor and activist Jameela Jamil addressed manosphere alpha male influencers' claims that woman are naturally submissive and want a man to dominate them.

A preview shared on Instagram by the Think Twice Show featured Jameela challenging that idea.

Keep Reading Show less
Pam Bondi
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Photo Of Pam Bondi's Official DOJ Portrait In The Trash Within Hours Of Her Firing Goes Viral—And Here Come The Jokes

Former Attorney General Pam Bondi is the butt of many jokes after a picture of her portrait in a trash can at the Department of Justice just hours after she was fired by President Donald Trump went viral.

Sources earlier confirmed to CNN that Trump had privately asked allies about the possibility of replacing Bondi, frustrated by the fury from his base toward the administration's handling of the Epstein files. Bondi is scheduled to give a deposition on Capitol Hill later this month as part of the congressional investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, the late financier, pedophile, and sex trafficker.

Keep Reading Show less