Matthew Dalton
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 324
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
A MAN has been barred from a restaurant for a fashion faux pas – wearing a shirt deemed too revealing for his fuller figure.
Evan Johannesen, of Rockhampton in central Queensland, has been asked not to return to his local sporting club's buffet restaurant after wearing a shirt not long enough to cover his belly.
Mr Johannesen, who attributes his weight problem to a severe medical condition, said he had been discriminated against as women were allowed to wear clothing much more revealing.
“It's just been overwhelmingly discriminatory. I'm just totally disgusted,” he said today.
“When women go in there with virtually nothing on and young lads going in there with thongs on ... nothing done about it.”
Mr Johannesen, who is a regular at the Bluebirds United Sports Club buffet, said he received a phone call shortly before he and his wife left for their regular Friday meal, telling him to stay home rather than embarrass himself at the club.
He said it wasn't until the next day he found out his dress-sense was behind the move.pe”I really don't know why I've been discriminated against like that,” he said.
“I always do take pride in my dress ... it's just I've got a medical problem that is way out of my control.
“I work out at the gym twice a day. There's nothing more I can do.”
He said he took exception to the club's rude handling of the situation and was awaiting an apology.
But club president Peter Batley has defended the action, saying the club had merely acted on the complaints of other diners.
Mr Batley said Mr Johannesen had not been banned and was welcome to return if he changed his attire.
Queensland University of Technology fashion lecturer Dean Brough said wearing shirts that didn't cover the bottom of the belly was a top male fashion no-no, along with shorts showing bum cracks and singlet shirts.
He said businesses had a right to decide dress standards as certain clothes could make other customers feel “immensely” uncomfortable.
“There's things you look at and think: 'Oh God they shouldn't be wearing that',” Mr Brough said.
However, he said men were often discriminated against as women were allowed a much broader scope of what they could wear.
Evan Johannesen, of Rockhampton in central Queensland, has been asked not to return to his local sporting club's buffet restaurant after wearing a shirt not long enough to cover his belly.
Mr Johannesen, who attributes his weight problem to a severe medical condition, said he had been discriminated against as women were allowed to wear clothing much more revealing.
“It's just been overwhelmingly discriminatory. I'm just totally disgusted,” he said today.
“When women go in there with virtually nothing on and young lads going in there with thongs on ... nothing done about it.”
Mr Johannesen, who is a regular at the Bluebirds United Sports Club buffet, said he received a phone call shortly before he and his wife left for their regular Friday meal, telling him to stay home rather than embarrass himself at the club.
He said it wasn't until the next day he found out his dress-sense was behind the move.pe”I really don't know why I've been discriminated against like that,” he said.
“I always do take pride in my dress ... it's just I've got a medical problem that is way out of my control.
“I work out at the gym twice a day. There's nothing more I can do.”
He said he took exception to the club's rude handling of the situation and was awaiting an apology.
But club president Peter Batley has defended the action, saying the club had merely acted on the complaints of other diners.
Mr Batley said Mr Johannesen had not been banned and was welcome to return if he changed his attire.
Queensland University of Technology fashion lecturer Dean Brough said wearing shirts that didn't cover the bottom of the belly was a top male fashion no-no, along with shorts showing bum cracks and singlet shirts.
He said businesses had a right to decide dress standards as certain clothes could make other customers feel “immensely” uncomfortable.
“There's things you look at and think: 'Oh God they shouldn't be wearing that',” Mr Brough said.
However, he said men were often discriminated against as women were allowed a much broader scope of what they could wear.