The New York Observer, October 9th, 2007
Despite the tough-girl reputation, Ms. McSweeney is laid-back and charming in person. On a recent rainy day in her spacious Tribeca apartment, she watched YouTube videos of the new ABC comedy âBig Shots,â claiming that their slogan âMen are the New Womenâ was stolen from a sticker and T-shirt she made last year. âIâm calling my lawyer,â she joked. Her sharp features melted at the sight of her 5-month-old daughter Kier, whom she had with her boyfriend Rob Cristofaro, owner of pioneering streetwear store Alife. She got pregnant during last yearâs Fashion Week. âCould she be any fucking cuter?â Ms. McSweeney cooed. She kissed Kierâs tiny toes before Ms. McSweeneyâs mother, who visits a few times a week, took her into the next room for a nap.
Oct. 15, 2007
The Designer Who'sBeating the Boys
â[I design] definitely for girls who are not afraid to speak their minds, thatâs probably the biggest thing,â said Ms. McSweeney, who was dressed in pencil-thin tight jeans, rain boots and an oversized red Alife sweatshirt. She sat at her desk, wallpapered with pictures of her recently released new collection, including a T-shirt printed with a photo of her bloody fist and another emblazoned with the slogan âProtect Me From What I Want.â âI think girls are always taught throughout life to act a certain way and please other people, and I think you should be pleasing yourself. Married to the MOB is more about that than the clothing. Itâs more a way for me to say what I feel.â
Married to the MOB is comprised of pun-inspired, text-based graphic T-shirts and a few hooded sweatshirts and jackets. Theyâre made for the downtown party girls and scenesters, from the street-smart tomboys in Nike sneakers to the couture-heeled, skinny-jean-wearing ladies from Williamsburg and the East Village.
âThe only analogy I can give is that if Alifers were âGreasers,â then the MOB chicks would be the âPink Ladies,â except thereâs no Sandra Deeâs in this club,â explained Jauretsi Saizarbitoria, former Jane magazine editor and friend of Ms. McSweeney, in an e-mail to The Observer. âIts not like a MOB girl is looking for a fight, but if you push her unnecessarily in a bar, sheâll fuck you up. Donât mess with Leah ⦠My first impression was a Tshirt she gave me a long time ago that read âMy girls rock Balenciaga and smoke mad marijuana.â I think that says it all.â
The first Married to the MOB collection, which Ms. McSweeney made with her former partner Sharon Coyne in 2004, featured a shirt emblazoned with âSupreme Bitch,â a taunting wordplay directed at Supreme, a menâs skater store that defines streetwear in New York. âI wanted to kind of mock one of the guy brands,â said Ms. McSweeney, whoâs quick to complain about the boysâ club atmosphere in the business.
âI hate that Iâm categorized with these people,â she said. âOther brands, people are just corny. I would never hang out with them. Like even though weâre in the same scene, in this clothing category, I would never associate with these people. Theyâre jocks. Theyâre losers.â
Ms. McSweeneyâs bold opinions make her a contentious character in the streetwear business. When her line debuted, the virtual peanut gallery at the fashion and culture Web site Superfuture.com shrieked that her brand had overplayed ideas and was only getting sold because of her reputationâboth as a regular at parties with streetwear boys and as the girlfriend of Alifeâs owner. âThe only reason people are pimpinâ their shit (and I do mean shit) is because 1)theyâre girls and 2)theyâre from NYC,â was one response in Superfutureâs community forum. Another: ââSupreme Bitchâ ⦠ooh! youâre a bitch! AND youâre down with the Supreme camp?!?!? holy fuck, you just went from skanky downtown groupie to irresistable runway model! how can i be down?â
âItâs insecure men, basically, talking,â Ms. McSweeney retorted with an eye roll. âAll weâre doing is making T-shirts. Whatâs the big deal? Iâve read a lot of crazy things like, I hope that bitch gets AIDS. I hope she gets raped.â
âI thought that tee shirt was gangster,â wrote Mr. Cristofaro, referring to the âSupreme Bitchâ tee, in an e-mail to The Observer. âI know that a lot of the guy brands were hating on MOB at first, and some still do, because it is a woman showing them how to get up in this tee shirt game.â
MARRIED TO THE MOBâs TOPS are in 50 shops worldwide and occasionally sell out within weeks of their arrival at stores, including Alife and Union in New York. Last summer, Ms. McSweeney designed a bikini with infamous graffiti artist KAWS, and it sold out in preorders before it officially went on sale.
High-end brands are starting to seek out Ms. McSweeneyâs street aesthetic. She collaborated with German accessories brand MCM to make an exclusive classic patent leather tote bag featuring the MOB logo and a puckering lip-shaped tag hanging from the handle. Next page >