ASOS 'Halloween' Bindis Spark Cultural Appropriation Debate

ASOS 'Halloween' Bindis Spark Cultural Appropriation Debate
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Cultural appropriation has become a hot topic in the fashion and beauty world of late, and ASOS are the latest company to spark an online debate.

The issue started when the website labelled a range of bindis by brand In Your Dreams as Halloween items.

The packaging makes no reference to the Bindis being intended for use on Halloween, or as part of a costume, and many shoppers took to Twitter to express their distaste at the ASOS marketing.

ASOS replied to one Twitter user today, tweeting the below message as a response to the question above from Rawnie Cally.

But it's not the first time the website has come under fire for cultural appropriation.

In a response to this article, a spokesperson for ASOS told HuffPost UK Style: "In Your Dreams is one of the brands available on ASOS.com. It is never our intention to knowingly offend anyone, therefore these products will be removed from ASOS.com."

We have also reached out to In Your Dreams for comment and will update this feature on reply.

The Year In Cultural Appropriation
Twerking(01 of07)
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If the word of the year in 2012 was YOLO, this year's word was twerking. And boy, was there a lot of it.Sure, Miley Cyrus was twerking, but so were a slew of other white celebrities from real housewives to former Disney channel stars. Which is all well and good, except the fact that twerking in pop culture looks like this and twerking originally looked like this.And we promise you, no black person almost won Time Magazine's Person of the Year after twerking at the VMAs.
Harlem Shake(02 of07)
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We get it, maybe a lot of people didn't watch 106 & Park in 2001 and have never seen G-Dep's "Special Delivery" video, but the Harlem shake from 12 years ago looked nothing like the viral video craze that took over the Internet this year.The Harlem shake from back in the day was done to syncopated rhythms, the Harlem shake of this year featured people swinging shirts, gyrating and doing whatever strange dance came to mind.
Jay Z(03 of07)
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That's right folks, not only did Jay kick the hyphen in his name to the side, he did the same to the black community this year. The rapper-turned-mogul made it painfully obvious on his "Magna Carta Holy Grail" album that things have changed for him, from his days in Marcy Projects to buying Picasso paintings and Tom Ford suits. But he drove the nail in the coffin when he stood by his partnership with Barneys, after the high-end retailer was accused of racial profiling.The rap community declared the once celebrated MC dead inside, but not to worry, Sean Carter lives on through his business ventures. (credit:AP)
R&B Music(04 of07)
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2013 was a big year for R&B music. But the frontrunners in the genre were what the black community affectionately calls "blue-eyed souls" like Justin Timberlake and Robin Thicke.Timberlake splashed back on the scene this year with a show-stopping comeback performance at the Grammys and the release of two albums ("The 20/20 Experience," "The 20/20 Experience – 2 of 2"), while Thicke sailed to the top of the charts with his hit single "Blurred Lines," which Billboard named the Song of the Summer ("Hey, Hey, Hey!").
Kanye's Voice(05 of07)
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This past summer Kanye West sat with his soon-to-be mother-in-law Kris Jenner for a sit down on her, now-canceled talk show, and the rapper showed a side of himself we rarely see-- the white Kanye.Shortly after footage from his interview was available, the Internet erupted with questions about Kanye's voice and why he dropped his quintessential Chicago accent. The rapper later explained why he switches his tone of voice in certain situations, an action known as "code-switching" in minority communities. “Even when you’re in certain magazines, it’s still like a dinner for Schmucks situation,” West says. “Are they inviting you to be a part of your situation, or are they inviting you to laugh at your tooth. We have our thing that every time we do it, we give them the 'white' voice.”
Awards(06 of07)
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We already told you that everything about the 2013 MTV VMA's was black, except for the winners. And no instance drove that home further than when Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "Can't Hold Us" took home the moon man for best hip-hop video, beating out the likes of Drake, Kendrick Lamar and A$AP Rocky, an occurrence some viewers were not happy with.
Our Skin Tone(07 of07)
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Unfortunately, blackface costumes rear their ugly heads every year, but 2013 seemed to be the year everyone decided to paint their faces. Julianne Hough caused quite a stir when she stepped out as "Crazy Eyes" from the Netflix hit series "Orange Is The New Black." But it didn't stop there. Some people took their costumes to a whole new level of ignorance and tastelessness dressing as Trayvon Martin and throwing Africa-themed parties. (credit:PACIFIC COAST NEWS)