Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
The invite has been the talk of the Cannes Lions advertising festival this week and was quickly circulated amongst female advertisting executives.
Cindy Gallop, an advertising consultant and feminist campaigner, shared the details of the invite on Twitter:
It's 2016, @vaynermedia @thrillist. This is not how you party at @cannes_lions. #canneslions #changetheratio pic.twitter.com/jF50tdPe0p
- Cindy Gallop (@cindygallop) June 22, 2016
As the tweet shows, the email - for an event taking place on Wednesday, sponsored by VaynerMedia and Thrillist Media Group - sought out "attractive females and models only," which was emphasized in bold and underlined text. The invite was sent by IGetIn, an events company.
"Gentlemen may contact the PR departments of the respective sponsors," the email read. Meanwhile, females hoping to attend were required to send their "untouched" photos from Facebook and Instagram.
VaynerMedia CEO Gary Vaynerchuk posted numerous videos to Twitter on Tuesday, apologizing for the email
He said he was "mortified" but took full responsibilty and was "getting to the bottom of it."
@cindygallop pic.twitter.com/jfjYeoBeRi
- Gary Vaynerchuk (@garyvee) June 22, 2016
Thrillist Media CEO Ben Lerer, however, was less apologetic, calling the email "promoter spam":
@brooke @garyvee @cindygallop @VaynerMedia @Thrillist guys, this is promoter spam. Would appreciate a little more credit.
- Ben Lerer (@BenjLerer) June 22, 2016
VaynerMedia, Thrillist, and IGetIn were not immediately available for comment.