| I totally agree with OP. I can not stand it!!! |
They are all stores under Abercrombie, and Hollister was named in the settlement. The consent decree mandates a number of steps to increase diversity in their employee base, and it took effect some time in 2005. So it may be that the store's practices are now entirely different from what got them into trouble in the first place. |
| i actually thinkk the music is goos because it attracts customers so they can make money. plus if you think about it the music isn't really that loud. so some maybe but to others it's fine. so yes it does stract people from the ages 14-18. |
| Maybe they want to drive off the grownups on purpose. And kids music is full of talk about dance clubs and DJ's. For them it is probably aspirational to be in a club. |
| I'm 43 and was just in the Montgomery Mall Hollister store last week to get a gift card for my niece. Didn't find the music to be overly loud at all. |
| Like one of the PPs, the smell of cologne in both of these places is disgusting. I ran into Abercrombie to get something for DD and was in there maybe 10 mins max. I get back to the office and co-workers were telling me I smelled like Abercrombie, HOllister, Etc!! |
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yes, the music is too loud for me (late 30s) in these stores, and I've also found it loud in urban outfitters in chinatown (had to leave early!) and the limited in montgomery mall, but just by the cash register. I was returning something so I couldn't leave.
You're supposed to be able to hear LESS as you age, so I imagine these places would have killed me when I was 13. Really don't think it was an age thing for me. |
None of the cool kids wear it anymore. The new trend is to avoid labels entirely. |
When did this site get populated by the teenage crowd? |
I think this poster is right. |
| It does what it's supposed to do, repel parents. |
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aren't you getting a bit old to be shopping there?
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The music never bothered me and I tend to like the "loud" music in some stores. I stopped shopping at A&F once I heard about the discriminatory practices there.
I'm twentysomething, if that helps. |
I can't imagine there are that many tweens who can afford Abercrombie prices without parents there paying for it. There may be the odd spoiled one who gets dad's credit card, but that can't account for the million Abercrombie locations across the country. |
Oh, not the odd one. Times have changed. These kids aren't spending their babysitting money anymore. |