There was once an Instagram account called Sporty & Rich. For a time, it served no commercial purpose. It was more of a brain tickle of pleasing images: a mood board of supermodels, interiors and advertisements, mostly from the 1980s and 1990s.
It posted vintage Range Rovers and Rolexes and Ralph Lauren — an affluent flavor of nostalgia occasionally punctuated by more modern references, like Frank Ocean’s album cover, Phoebe Philo’s designs for Céline, and President Barack Obama playing basketball. When it came to sports, it favored both the sexy (an up-skirt photo of a woman playing tennis) and the ironic (Joe Namath at 70, cocooned in a fur coat at the Super Bowl).
The account, created by Emily Oberg when she was 20 years old, was a hobby. It was an expression of her personal style, which she described as “mixing high and low, like sneakers with a designer bag, in a way I think is very common and ubiquitous now.” At the time, Ms. Oberg was living in an apartment in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, and working as a video personality for the media company Complex.
But hobbies do not stay hobbies for long in the modern age. As her following grew, Ms. Oberg envisioned a print magazine. She envisioned a small line of merch: simple hoodies and tote bags and hats embroidered with “Sporty & Rich.” Then she began to envision a different life for herself — one of less hustle and more leisure. She moved to Los Angeles in 2018, and now her T-shirts are printed with phrases like “Health Is Wealth!” and “Drink More Water!”
The brand has also since grown, according to its chief executive, David Obadia, into an approximately $30 million business.
Now 29, Ms. Oberg has returned to New York to open Sporty & Rich’s first retail location. The SoHo store will not only sell her vintage-inspired activewear and graphic loungewear, but also offer two spa services: a “lymphatic sculpting” massage and a “natural face-lift” facial that targets buccal fat. Instead of mannequins in the front window, there is a large sculpture of a glass of green juice, which will be served in the store’s cafe along with bone broth, smoothies and coffee imported from Los Angeles.
Soon there will be Sporty & Rich skin-care products, and Ms. Oberg said she was working on developing dietary supplements and sex toys, too. If this all sounds a little familiar, that’s intentional.
“I kind of want us to be a younger person’s version of Goop,” Ms. Oberg said while overseeing the unpacking of the new store last week. She had just flown in from Majorca. It was an oppressive 89 degrees in New York, and she wore a chambray shirt (Ralph Lauren) tucked into white jeans (Khaite) with stiletto-heel ankle boots (the Row) and a gold watch (Cartier).
“I don’t think it really matters what we make,” Ms. Oberg said. “I think people just want something that’s Sporty & Rich.”
The Gwyneth Playbook
In the years since she moved to Los Angeles, Ms. Oberg has been open about her personal health routines and experiments. Last year she published “The Sporty & Rich Wellness Book,” a $100 coffee-table tome of advice and artful photos of toned-and-tanned models in states of undress.
In 2020, she told The Strategist she got “colonics a lot” and recommended her favorite at-home enema kit, which she said she used with coffee instead of water. In person, she talked about getting ozone therapy from a naturopath to help treat her autoimmune disorder, Graves’ disease. “That’s done through the rectum,” she added.
Ms. Oberg knows that “people in wellness are heavily, heavily scrutinized,” she said. She knows this from being “obsessed” with the Goop founder, Gwyneth Paltrow, a fellow fan of rectal ozone therapy who courts outrage on a biannual basis (most recently for discussing liquid diets). But Ms. Oberg also speaks from personal experience.
In 2020, she apologized for an Instagram post that compared the prices of fast food and snacks to “real food.” (The price of a McDonald’s Happy Meal, $3.57, was listed next to a bag of lettuce, $1.99.) She had written that people “don’t need to be rich to be healthy” and should “stop making excuses” — remarks that were criticized as insensitive and ignorant of the reality of food deserts. In her apology, Ms. Oberg explained that her post “was meant for people who DO have the option to choose a healthy lifestyle, not those who have no option or choice.”
More remarks by Ms. Oberg resurfaced — a since deleted Instagram account called @notsportyrich was devoted to aggregating them — as when she identified as a “big time” anti-vaxxer on a giggly 2019 episode of “Failing Upwards” (a shock jock fashion podcast now known as “Throwing Fits,” co-hosted by her former boss at Complex).
“I think that there were a lot of people who love to hate me, for whatever reason,” Ms. Oberg said.
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