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When asked about the modern-day Lululemon and its new leadership, Wilson didn’t hold back on how he feels about the company’s “whole diversity and inclusion thing.”

“They’re trying to become like the Gap, everything to everybody,” he told Forbes . “And I think the definition of a brand is that you’re not everything to everybody… You’ve got to be clear that you don’t want certain customers coming in.”

The Lululemon founder also shared his distaste for the appearance of the people in the brand’s recent ads, saying they look “unhealthy,” “sickly,” and “not inspirational,” according to the magazine.

They added, “Chip has not been involved with the company since his resignation from the board in 2015 and we are a very different company today.”

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Despite this, Wilson’s criticism against inclusivity in his Forbes interview has stirred up significant outrage against the brand on social media. “I knew Lululemon gave me a nasty vibe,” one person wrote in a Jan. 4 X post . Another X user wrote , “Just cleared my Lululemon cart so fast he is crazy.”

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“There has always been pilling. The thing is that women will wear seatbelts that don’t work or they’ll wear a purse that doesn’t work or, quite frankly, some women’s bodies just don’t work for it,” Wilson told Bloomberg TV in 2023, per CBC. “It’s really about the rubbing through the thighs, how much pressure is there … over a period of time, and how much they use it.”

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“In Canada for instance, 99 percent of our factory workers are Chinese women sewers. If you were to work them eight-hour days, they will be mad at you. If you only work them five days a week for only eight hours, they’ll say, ‘What are you doing? I don’t want to work for you,’” he said, per the Elephant Journal. “If you do only work them that much, they walk out of their shift at four o’clock and walk across the street to another factory and work another six hours.”

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That same year, Wilson also made another problematic remark directed towards the Asian community. He told Canada’s National Post Business Magazine that he named the brand Lululemon as a marketing ploy because it is hard for Japanese people to pronounce.

“L is not in [the Japanese] vocabulary. It’s a tough pronunciation for them. So I thought, next time I have a company, I’ll make a name with three Ls and see if I can get three times the money,” Wilson said, per NextShark. “It’s kind of exotic for them. I was playing with Ls and I came up with Lululemon. It’s funny to watch them try to say it.”

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“Breast cancer also came into prominence in the 1990’s,” he wrote. “I suggest this was due to the number of cigarette-smoking Power Women who were on the pill (initial concentrations of hormones in the pill were very high) and taking on the stress previously left to men in the working world.”