Nonbinary activist Deni Todorović dropped by manager amid scandal

Controversial non-binary activist Deni Todorović splits with high-profile manager amid Seafolly scandal and shocking cocaine shooting

Non-binary activist Deni Todorović split from their high-profile manager Pru ​​Corrigan the same day they pushed brands to drop them over a shocking admission that they use cocaine.

The 35-year-old, who uses she/she pronouns, admitted they “love a line of cocaine” and invited brands to drop them if they disagree last Friday.

Just hours later, Corrigan, who founded PR advisory group One Day Dream, announced she had parted ways with the influencer as a client.

“I’m no longer behind the wheel of Deni’s car,” Corrigan said in an Instagram post.

It is with mixed feelings that I bid farewell to this time in my life. I’m very grateful for the time we’ve shared as partners, but as with everything else – the show goes much further.”

Non-binary activist Deni Todorović (left) split from their high-profile manager Pru ​​Corrigan (right) on the same day they pushed brands to drop them after a shocking admission that they use cocaine

Daily Mail Australia has contacted Todorović for comment.

It comes after the fashionista announced that they are using cocaine recreationally and will not apologize for it.

The stylist challenged luxury brands to drop them if they have a problem with their admission before calling for drug decriminalization.

Todorović, who controversially collaborated with swimwear brand Seafolly earlier this year, shared their thoughts on illegal substances in an Instagram post last week.

The trans and non-binary activist who uses she/she pronouns admitted they “love a line of cocaine” and invited brands to drop them if they disagree last Friday

Just hours later, Corrigan, who founded PR advisory group One Day Dream, announced she had parted ways with the influencer as a client

They said they’re “partial for a line or two” [of cocaine] just like any AFL footy player doing it behind the world’s back’.

Todorović went on to extol the virtues of drug legalization – noting how the policy has lowered crime rates in countries like Portugal – and then challenged “one of the brands I work with” to make their deals with them if that “doesn’t align with your ethos’.

Just a few weeks earlier, Australian swimwear brand Seafolly distanced itself from the non-binary activist after a photoshoot that left consumers divided.

At the time, some feminist critics said promoting women’s swimwear by a non-binary biological man was “wiping out women,” noting that the Seafolly campaign was unhappily close to International Women’s Day.

It comes after the fashionista announced that they are using cocaine recreationally and will not apologize for it

The stylist challenged luxury brands to drop them if they have a problem with their admission before calling for drug decriminalization

Just a few weeks earlier, Australian swimwear brand Seafolly distanced itself from the non-binary activist after a photoshoot that left consumers divided

Writer Alexandra Marshall was among those who had spoken out against the brand’s partnership with Todorovič, saying the swimwear brand “mocks women” and said she would boycott Seafolly.

Bye @seafolly. Never again. Have been buying swimwear from you for many years. Never again,” she wrote on Twitter.

A source with knowledge of the situation said, “Seafolly will never work with Deni again. They said in so many words that Deni is a liability to the brand and alienates customers. There was even talk of financiers withdrawing investments.’

Seafolly issued a public statement at the time of the scandal, stressing that they “support all women” and that supermodel Joanna Halpin was always their official ambassador, not Deni.

Since the scandal, the once-celebrated swimwear brand has gone up for sale less than three years after it was bailed out of administration.

The 34-year-old influencer identifies as both transgender and non-binary

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