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Butting in on fashion: Gen-X sinks to new lows
Houston Chronicle ^ | August 3, 2003 | MICHELLE MALKIN

Posted on 08/03/2003 9:42:49 AM PDT by Dog Gone

How low can we go? I am talking, of course, about today's waistbands.

If you thought the belly-baring thing was bad enough, take a good look at the sartorial depths to which fashion has now sunk. The Los Angeles Times last week declared it "the summer of the pelvic bone." Last year's already obscene low-riders have gone the way of high-water polyester pants.

Today's hip-huggers have almost nothing but hope to hang onto anymore. The "normal" inseam-to-waist rise of 8 to 9 inches is shrinking faster than Britney Spears' record sales. To wit, Levi's has introduced a new line of jeans called "Too Superlow" for women. Upping the ante, or should I say lowering it, the teenage-girl brand Gasoline markets "Down2There" -- adjustable low-rise jeans with a built-in bungee cord designed to help the wearer drop her pants to even nastier nadirs.

Canadian teen singer Avril Lavigne's perilously sagging pants are a global youth phenomenon. "My butt crack showing is like my trademark," she gracefully explained to a music reporter. Salon.com writer Janelle Brown approves: "(T)he butt crack is the new cleavage, reclaimed to peek seductively from the pants of supermodels and commoners alike."

The late Sen. and social critic Daniel Patrick Moynihan's famous phrase "Defining deviancy down" has taken on a whole new meaning.

Grown-ups, be forewarned: Avril's fashion nonsense is seeping into other markets. Levi's recently launched a "Dangerously Low" line for men. Another of its low-rise men's lines is dubbed, appropriately enough, "Offender." Actor Brad Pitt has popularized the Diesel brand low-risers. Toronto-based writer Jim Oldfield says the trend has overwhelmed mainstream men's stores and orders are already piling up for the fall. One Canadian merchant helpfully advised Oldfield that hip men are wearing the jeans commando-style.

In other words: "Underwear is, like, not required."

Even expectant women can't escape these drooping duds. Popular young actress and mom-to-be Kate Hudson has been photographed parading around in low-rise cargo pants and toddler-sized crop tops to show off her growing belly. At a recent trip to my neighborhood mall's maternity store, the only jeans in my size were ridiculous low-risers with flared bottoms that needed hiking every time I exhaled.

Trust me: This nouveau plumber's crack chic does not look any better on the overweight guy crouching under your kitchen sink than it does on a six-months-pregnant lady trying to bend over to pick up her toddler without mooning the world.

What will it take to convince the current cohort of exhibitionistas that sleaze is not sexy -- that less is not always more, that low is low-class? If Generation X-rated can't be persuaded to cover up out of moral necessity, perhaps they will listen to medical authority. A warning about the health hazards of low-rise pants was published in the Canadian Medical Association six months ago. According to Dr. Malvinder Parmar, a painful condition called "meralgia paresthetica" is causing wearers of hip-huggers to experience "tingling or a burning sensation" in the thighs.

Dr. Parmar's treatment: four to six weeks in -- the horror! -- loose-fitting dresses. Must have been worse than swallowing cod liver oil.

Avril and Britney and Brad need to show their fans that a little extra fabric is not a death sentence. The late Kate Hepburn melted hearts while fully clothed in turtlenecks and roomy, belted trousers. She was a "hottie" who showed us her cheekbones, and left the rest where it should be left: to the imagination.

Alas, modesty has been long out of vogue. But it's a fashion rule of thumb that what's out eventually becomes in. The day when "clothed is the new naked" can't come soon enough.

Malkin is a nationally syndicated columnist based in North Bethesda, Md. malkin@comcast.net


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: fashion; genx; michellemalkin
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To: null and void
Fixed your, like, typo

You fixed my typo that you like? Thanks!

121 posted on 08/04/2003 9:21:26 PM PDT by usadave
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To: Tribune7
Oh, there are nasty boomers, there's no doubt about that. But as boomer parents said about boomers as a group, that we "slipped" from the standards they upheld, I see that Xers, as a group, have slipped. I visited one of my professors, who told me that many more Xers plaigiarized, and when caught, had no shame - said "So what?" I'm not saying there aren't Xers that are as morally fine as the best boomers. Only that there are fewer of them. FReegards
122 posted on 08/04/2003 11:14:32 PM PDT by 185JHP ( Penumbras. Emanations. Fatuities.)
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To: Ayn Rand wannabe
The most damaging and dangerous human characteristic is pride - and a lot of parents teach their children too much pride. It happened to Jimmy Connors, if you know anything about tennis - then we got McEntire, who was a lot worse! I'm glad you're OK, and are here at FR. Lotta caring, wonderful people here...
123 posted on 08/04/2003 11:19:13 PM PDT by 185JHP ( Penumbras. Emanations. Fatuities.)
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To: qam1
You know, I just realized that neither of my parents are "baby boomers" (I'm 26, by the way). Not only were they born several years before the 1945 cut-off date, but my mom grew up in Germany so even if she were of the right age, she wouldn't have gotten the cultural experiences that shaped the baby boomers. In fact both of my parents, well, I'll put it this way...they grew up without a lot of the material things that the boomer's parents lavished them with.

(The boomer's parents, having gone through the great depression, spoiled them. So that's why boomers often act as spoiled brats--because they started life that way, and never grew out of it).
124 posted on 08/05/2003 10:29:40 AM PDT by brianl703
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To: 4mycountry
=) I'm glad to see a fellow GenY that feels that way about clothing.

But it's more than what mom says. It's what I think of me that enters into my wardrobe selection

125 posted on 11/18/2003 1:45:08 AM PST by PurVirgo (Here's a tip - Never weedeat the dog pen with your mouth open)
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To: spodefly
no way - spandex is as unforgiving as leather pants in Houston

It's a right, not a privelege

126 posted on 11/18/2003 1:51:01 AM PST by PurVirgo (Here's a tip - Never weedeat the dog pen with your mouth open)
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To: Donna Rumsfeld
Ditto that. Regular Jeans are Urkel pants on me.

Jeans that sit on (not below) my hips are perfect. Even Men's jeans fit me better.

But the ultra-low types just don't look good

127 posted on 11/18/2003 2:01:42 AM PST by PurVirgo (Here's a tip - Never weedeat the dog pen with your mouth open)
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To: Ayn Rand wannabe
amazing a thread like this brings us all out =)

Gives me hope, cuz I don't see many folks my age that agree with me

128 posted on 11/18/2003 2:05:47 AM PST by PurVirgo (Here's a tip - Never weedeat the dog pen with your mouth open)
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To: qam1

Hey man, watch it. There are some conservative boomers. We are ostracized. People expect you young punks to be different, and you are.

Learn some manners.


129 posted on 10/17/2006 8:42:44 PM PDT by old-ager
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To: Chi-townChief

Next fashion fad.

130 posted on 10/17/2006 8:45:37 PM PDT by bannie
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