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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Amber Valletta Says, ‘I Don’t Want to Work in an Industry That Is the Same as Before’

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 14 July 2020

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The supermodel, actress and environmental activist talks to BoF Editor-at-Large Tim Blanks about why the fashion industry cannot return to ‘business as normal.’

 

LONDON, United Kingdom — “The uncertainty has forced us to get really present.... We have an amazing opportunity to restart and to begin again,” Amber Valletta told BoF Editor-at-Large Tim Blanks in the latest episode of The BoF Podcast. “It is an incredible opportunity to stop and really figure out where we want to go from here. We can redesign a future.”

 

The American supermodel and actress, who has graced the cover of American Vogue 13 times and starred in various television and film series, including Revenge, Legends and Hitch, shared her thoughts on why the pandemic and political unrest has signalled the need for an equitable supply chain and an overhaul of the fashion calendar to reflect the industry’s “new normal.” 

 

  • Following the outbreak of the coronavirus, many garment workers in countries like India and Bangladesh were left destitute as textile factories shuttered and retailers in the west cancelled orders. “Before the designers make this amazing piece, [garment workers] are the people who put in the blood, sweat and tears,” Valletta said. . “In the 21st century, we should have a supply chain that’s fair and equitable.” 
  • Affecting change may not be simple but it is definitely required, Valletta said. In order to thrive in a post-pandemic climate, the fashion industry at large needs “to be resilient… which means we have to really stop doing business as normal because normal is archaic now.” For Valletta, fashion is about change and innovation: “I don’t want to work in an industry that is the same as before,” she said. 
  • “Why aren’t we slowing down the calendar?,” Valletta asked, addressing the industry’s incessant output of clothes that has accelerated over the years. “I was blessed to live in the most spectacular time in fashion… the crews were smaller, everything… There was an intimacy and excitement that we don’t have today,” she said, reflecting on her modelling career. . “There was no [social media]... and there was anticipation of the next season… Everything coming at you was a discovery.”

 

Watch and listen to more #BoFLIVE conversations here. To contact The Business of Fashion with comments, questions, or speaker ideas please e-mail [email protected].

 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

I think we could retool the entire industry in fashion.

0:05.0

The future we want to build is a resilient industry, which means we have to really stop doing business as normal, because normal is archaic now.

0:14.0

You can't post Black Lives Matter and then not pay your garment workers.

0:19.0

It's funny that so much of the conversation and fashion over the last little while has been,

0:23.6

this has to stop, this has to change.

0:26.1

We could become one of the most revolutionary and real change agents.

0:30.7

As much as I put the responsibility on us in the industry,

0:34.2

I also put it on consumers to wake up to their power.

0:42.3

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion and welcome to the

0:47.1

Bof podcast. Last week, our editor-at-large Tim Blanks sat down with the supermodel, Amber Valletta.

0:53.9

Now, Amber has always struck me as one of the most

0:55.8

thoughtful people in the fashion industry. And her conversation with Tim last week further underscored that.

1:02.3

Her point of view is that the industry simply cannot return to business as usual. With supply

1:07.1

chain challenges and a calendar that's racing out of control, Amber's in the camp of

1:12.0

shifting fashion to something more suited for the current times. Here's Tim Blanks with Amber

1:18.5

Valletta inside fashion. Welcome to B.O.F. Today we're talking to Amber Valletta. I'm in London. She's in Los Angeles. So obviously it's really early in the morning. Or is it early in the morning?

1:37.4

It's really early. It's 8 a.m. What time do you usually get up?

1:43.0

Well, normally I get up pretty early as soon as the sun's up.

1:48.0

So I'm usually awake, but since quarantine, sleeping has been different.

1:54.0

Yeah, it's true.

1:56.0

I found myself in bed at 10.30, which is ludicrous.

2:01.6

You know, I usually go to bed around 3.

...

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