Everything about Fcuk totally explained
French Connection is a company founded in the
United Kingdom in 1972 which sells clothing and accessories in many parts of the world.
In April 1997, French Connection began branding their clothes "
fcuk" (usually written in lowercase). Large stores are in
Leeds and
London. Though they insisted it was an
acronym for French Connection United Kingdom, its similarity to the word "
fuck" caused controversy. French Connection fully exploited this and produced an extremely popular range of t-shirts with messages such as "fcuk this", "hot as fcuk", "mile high fcuk", "lucky fcuk", "Fun Comes Usually Kneeling", "fcuk on the beach", etc. There were also a number of regionally specific messages, such as "fcuk in hull" (bearing similarity to "fucking hell") and "no fcukin worries" (in Australia) and "fcuk off". "Chugging the fcuk" and "Munching on fcuk" were popular shirt titles but were later found as inappropriate. Designer Daniel Greenwood later sued the company for inconsistency in shirt titles and lack of lenience. Apparently they first discovered the acronym when a fax was sent from their Hong Kong store FCHK to FCUK.
In 2001, during the introduction of French Connection in
San Francisco, big banners hung on the front of the newly opened store saying "San Francisco's first fcuk."
Distribution
French Connection has distributing stores worldwide. It predominantly sells its clothing through its own stores, though many other shops stock its ranges. In the
United States, the fcuk brand has been controversial; the
American Family Association, for example, has urged a boycott of fcuk products.
Legal cases and controversy
French Connection launched a trademark infringement case in the London High Court challenging the owner of "First Consultants UK Ltd", a computer company, over its use of the fcuk acronym. It was proven in the case the Internet Domain fcuk.com was registered prior to French Connection applying for the UK Trademark and its claim for passing off was dismissed. Mr Justice Rattee, refused to grant an injunction, describing French Connection's use of it as "a tasteless and obnoxious campaign."
The company also threatened legal action against the right-wing political youth organisation
Conservative Future, which had briefly adopted the spoof abbrevation "cfuk" (short for "Conservative Future UK").
Another judge reportedly expelled a potential juror from his courtroom for wearing one of the fcuk range of T-shirts, saying that the "mis-spelt Anglo Saxon word" was a distraction and didn't dignify the court proceedings.
Following years of complaints, the UK's
Advertising Standards Authority banned a number of advertisements and ordered the company to submit all posters for approval before running them.
In the United States, mayor of
Boston, Massachusetts Thomas Menino told French Connection to remove their ads from billboards throughout the city, according to the Boston
Metro.
Fashion vs Style
In February 2006 French Connection launched the Fashion vs Style campaign that replaced the previous fcuk advertising. The first advertisement in the campaign was directed by
Duncan Jones, son of
David Bowie, and featured girls in the roles of Fashion and Style
fighting.
It was reported in the national press that this advert received between 121 and 127 complaints in the first week of being broadcast and may become as controversial as the previous fcuk campaign.
Cultural references
In the 2004 film
Layer Cake, the character XXXX played by
Daniel Craig walks through a pharmacy, past products bearing labels such as "FCUK Reality" cocaine. The founder of French Connection, Stephen Marks, was the executive producer of the film.
(External Link
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