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Now don't get me wrong: Hats are sexy, and I encourage them. But if you decide to partake, do yourself a favor and invest in a high-quality fedora.
I'm impressed she manages to function at all if her head is truly wedged as far up her own rectum as this suggests. lol Wish I'd read her biog first - "recovering feminist" indeed.... any woman who considers being a feminist as something undesirable is unlikely to be someone who produces an opinion worth the reading, IMFNSHO.
I think the article is a useful read. After all, we have regular stories about our myriad of hecklers from day to day. Very few of them feature an antagonist who fully articulates his/her rationale. If a person doesn't like what I wear, I want to know why. Usually I go on doing what I do, but every once in a while, even a heckler has a core of truth. In this article, she really drives home the idea of head shapes and angles and whatnot. While I do think the core of the argument is BS - that hats almost never look good, I think if a person is going to wear a hat, keeping in mind some of the pitfalls that hat haters notice most would be useful - a nice heads up.
EDIT: RE: Recovering feminist - My conclusion is that the author took the worst of feminism as the core of feminism and saw it as something to run away from. There's productive feminism and there's man hating. I suspect she's recovered from the latter. It's a shame the latter shares the same label as the set of ideals that achieved the great strides in equality. She does similar disservice to hat wearers in the article itself, in my opinion. There are a lot of people who wear hats in a way the majority might not find flattering. I wonder if there's more unflattering hat use than flattering - an argument could be made. Nonetheless, it's not an issue of men in hats. That's too simple, and nothing's ever simple. Anyone can look good in a hat. The key is finding the right one. While she does acknowledge that briefly, it's largely overshadowed by the bigger "Fedoras pretty much never look good, ever" argument she works so hard to drive home.
I quite agree, and fwiw, I find the essentialists almost as pernicious as the misogynists/misandrists. So please forgive my sardonicism. You too, Mob.That's going too far - I can agree that some of the more radical strains of it are just as bad as the misogynists they fight, but I see nothing wrong with the notion that women should be given legal and social rights equal to men. -M
It is interesting, I was just looking out of curiosity at the difference of opinions between askmen and esquire on hats, and esquire is much more favorable. Generally, it promotes much better dressing than askmen. I assume it is for a different audience.
This is a quote from an article:
I don't know about hats being "sexy". In fact, I don't quite get why a hat would have any reason to have that quality. What is this modern obsession with oozing pheromones? How about being warm, or being stylish, for example, which is probably the reason any man in a well-fitting hat or nice cap (not baseball, unless they are currently playing that game) usually gets my head turning or a very appreciative glance at the least...
lollolShe probably has strong opinions about mens beards, their clothes, hair, cars, eyeglasses. You name it. She will complain about it and tell you what she doesn't like. I think I was married to her back in the 70's. :eusa_doh:
Oh, and thanks to the author of the article for making an incredibly broad statement about white men not looking good in fedoras (and then lumping Cuban men, who are not of one race, but range from light white to deep bronze, all into one group)...As Dr. Strange wrote, nonsense.