So it came as a shock to many when Kendall surfaced during E!'s red carpet coverage of the "Golden Globes" Sunday night - in a commercial for Proactiv, the acne treatment brand that has had a long line of celebrity endorsers, including Justin Bieber, Jessica Simpson, Katy Perry and Alicia Keys. In the ad, Kendall recalls getting criticism (and support) after she was pictured with visible acne on the Golden Globes red carpet last year.
"For me, I can honestly say that the magic was Proactiv," Kendall says. "It's a huge deal that I'm partnering with Proactiv, and I'm hoping that I can help people and show people that this is the way that I got clear and that, hopefully, this is the way that you can get clear."
That was the big announcement? Yes, Kendall confirmed minutes later, posting a heart emoji as she shared Proactiv's tweet welcoming her "to the family."
People were . . . disappointed. "How brave of Kendall to be paid millions to promote a skin care brand," one Twitter user wrote. "was this the announcement bc if so i want my money back," riffed another.
Others referenced another sponsorship gone wrong for Kendall: Pepsi, which infamously pulled a 2017 ad featuring the model after an onslaught of criticism about the commercial, which made vague references to Black Lives Matter and other social justice movements and seemed to reduce serious issues to a universal need for the carbonated soft drink.
So far, neither Kris nor Kendall have addressed the latest controversy.
Though, to be fair, there's nothing more Kardashian than a paid sponsorship. And technically, the answer was lurking in Kris Jenner's tweets all along - another hashtag she included was #finallyasolution, which now reads like a veiled reference to the Proactiv Solution 3-Step System.