Reebok blasted for selling ‘Alien Stomper’ shoes exclusively in men’s sizes

It’s Alien Day.

In case you’ve been living on another planet, today is a day where fans commemorate the classic 1979 sci-fi thriller “Alien,” starring Sigourney Weaver. The connection to today is tenuous: The planet’s name in the movie is LV-426, and today is April 26, or 4/26. To mark the occasion, Reebok is releasing a limited edition shoe based on the pair Weaver’s character wore called “Alien Stompers.”

The shoes.
The shoes.

They went on sale at noon today and sold out within an hour. After all, Reebok only produced 426 (get it?) pairs. These “limited edition” sales often sell out quickly and often result in ordering problems, as happened here. But fans also lashed out the promotion because Reebok only made shoes in men’s sizes. Shoes that were, after all, worn by a female character in the movie.

That led to a barrage of complaints directed at Reebok:

The comments were echoed on Instagram, too. “Men’s sizes only? For the shoes of the greatest Sci-Fi movie heroine ever? Way to be a cliché of a thoughtless bro,” a user wrote.

Reebok blamed a mis-categorization on its website for the error, telling Digiday the shoes were for sale “in a unisex style and was produced in sizes U.S men’s 3.5 to 12, which is a typical size range for a unisex model.”

If it’s any consolation, pairs of the $175 shoes are already selling for upwards of $400 on eBay.

More in Marketing

Electronic Arts is betting that in-game ads can out-earn CTV

To make in-game ads stick, EA has built its own stack rather than rent one. Now it wants to shape the standards before anyone else does.

Future of Marketing Briefing: Why Bose is building an entertainment company

Bose has a new entertainment division. Its CMO hasn’t used a creative agency in five years. The two things are related.

The rise of pharma ad tech

Insiders say it comes at the cost of legacy platforms such as DSPs and SSPs.