People Are Calling Out Gwen Stefani After She Repeatedly Said She's Japanese In An Interview

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This week, singer Gwen Stefani sat down with Allure to promote the launch of her new beauty line, GXVE.

Gwen smiles as she performs onstage with backup dancers behind her
Rich Fury / Getty Images for Spotify

In the Allure piece, the interviewer asked her about the backlash she faced in the 2000s.

Gwen poses at the MET Gala in a bandeau top, flared floor-length skirt and matching gloves
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

During this time, she had a fragrance collection called "Harajuku Lovers" and often featured "Harajuku Girls" — her four Japanese backup dancers — in her videos. She would also frequently reference Japanese culture in a lot of her work.

Gwen standing next to a flower wall with an attached sign that says "Harajuku Lovers"
Stefanie Keenan / Getty

And because of this, many people — then and now — have used her as a prime example of cultural appropriation.

Gwen on TRL with her Japanese backup dancers

So the Allure interviewer asked Gwen what she had learned from it all. But the Grammy-winning singer gave a rather bizarre answer. The interviewer said, "[Gwen] responded by telling me a story she’s shared with the press before about her father’s job at Yamaha, which had him traveling between their home in California and Japan for 18 years."

Gwen posing for photographers with her four dancers
Jon Furniss / WireImage

Here's what Gwen told the Allure interviewer: "That was my Japanese influence and that was a culture that was so rich with tradition, yet so futuristic [with] so much attention to art and detail and discipline, and it was fascinating to me."

Gwen poses with the dancers on the red carpet of the Billboard Music awards
J. Merritt / FilmMagic

After traveling back as an adult, where she was able to more fully enmesh herself in the culture, Gwen said, "I said, 'My God, I'm Japanese and I didn't know it.' I am, you know."

  Gregory Pace / FilmMagic
Gregory Pace / FilmMagic

"If [people are] going to criticize me for being a fan of something beautiful and sharing that, then I just think that doesn't feel right. I think it was a beautiful time of creativity — a time of the ping-pong match between Harajuku culture and American culture," Gwen said. "[It] should be okay to be inspired by other cultures because if we're not allowed, then that's dividing people, right?"

  Kmazur / Getty
Kmazur / Getty

Some people were perplexed and upset by her comments:

Others defended her:

And some wasted no time and memed/made light of it:

You can read Gwen's full interview here.