Calling It Cringe Lets Them Off the Hook
How Adidas x Satisfy Fucked Up in the Desert.
On May 15th, Adidas x Satisfy staged a performance in the desert. To say the backlash was immediate still makes it sound like the reaction arrived in slow waves. It didn’t. It detonated.
First came the text threads. Yo, isn’t that the dude who… didn’t she work with… are they for real!? Then the jokes dripping with disbelief. I thought this was a parody. Then the brand defenses. Influencers responding in emoji instead of, you know, words with their own thoughts. Then my personal favorite: the deleting. Comments pulled, posts disappeared, Satisfy taking down their own reel and blasting company-wide emails. Or did they? With the rumor mill pumping, run industry parody Instagram accounts nailed the tone perfectly in real time. Some real (dumb) Game of Thrones shit. All before our Monday morning coffee.
And through all of it, one word rose to the surface: Cringe.
That word is doing too much work here, and I’m writing to take it back.
On a nice day, cringe implies misfire. It suggests someone tried to belong and fell short on the measuring stick of cultural awareness. After a second beer, cringe has dangerously become a tool to silence experimentation: the weird run post, the earnest attempt, the person who refused to be embarrassed into stopping. The most interesting things happening in running right now exist precisely because someone didn’t care what it looked like. That’s not what we saw at that pump track desert disco.
What we saw was something that kills more brands than a co-founder’s racist tweet from 2012: Distance. A brand standing, by expensive choice, just outside a culture, observing it carefully, borrowing its sounds and shapes, and returning it as a finished object is an affected, inward-facing translation. This desert athletic stage show distracted from their pro athletes are actually achieving and what their environmental stewardship is genuinely building. That is distance and that is what Adidas x Satisfy done fucked up!
On Sunday, I exchanged messages with a journalist who paid most of her own way to be there. As her points waned, she threw out the street-culture brand Supreme as a comparison. The argument was that Supreme sold out too and nobody got mad. But that comparison indicts Satisfy more precisely than it defends them. Supreme worked because it was already fluent in the language it was using. They made dumb things expensive on purpose. Remember those branded bricks dropping at the Fairfax store, beach chairs on the sidewalk, their community lined up overnight, fully in on the absurdity? Supreme didn’t observe culture from a safe distance and reconstruct it. It spoke from within it.
Adidas x Satisfy, by contrast, felt like culture viewed through glass. Not hostile, though the music suggested otherwise. Not malicious either, the attendees genuinely appeared to be having fun. Just separated and that lack of self awareness brought out the ick army. This one stung more than other Satisfy missteps because it made visible something usually left unspoken: a headcount of who is inside the culture and who is left to interpret it from the outside. That’s not an aesthetic failure. That’s a values failure. And runners, who carry a particular generosity toward imperfection and a belief in shared spaces, notice the difference between something real and lived through and something manufactured and staged almost immediately.
Cringe gets forgotten. Values stay.
So here I am, with my Monday morning coffee and I’m realizing the real tension was never in the desert at the Gathering of the Neck Tattoos. It is in the distance, Satisfy or otherwise. Which leaves the only question worth asking for run clubs, for run culture, and yes, for whoever greenlit this at Satisfy:
What gets built when people stop mistaking aesthetics for belonging?





Holy moly, this is so well stated! Not coming in hot, arriving with thoughtful reflection and context. Beautifully said! Thanks
Is your point that this race/show/event was a failure of running’s values because satisfy is cringe and doesn’t belong in the scene?