The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
You really can't judge a person by his outfit, you know?
Nothing to do with the outfit. Put a creative guy who can make me sing and dance as he plays killer music in an Armani three-piece and I'm right there.
But I HAD a corporate hottie chewtoy for a brief affair in the early eighties. Built like a porn star, Mister Big Money International Business Guy, and dear god WHAT a fucking bore. If I don't care about what he finds important, I don't care what he's wearing - I won't find him hot.
Although I find those men who wear velvet frock coats to Hollywood function often laughable
Daniel Day-Lewis wore a frock coat in 1989, when he got the oscar for best actor.
I had to have my tongue surgically removed from the screen.
90% of real people who wear suits wear them indifferently
Doesn't that cover 90% of people who wear clothes?
Harlouette, gentil Harlouette, Harlouette, gentil plumerie...
Curse you, Red Baron.
Doesn't that cover 90% of people who wear clothes?
Well, presumably when you're wearing an outfit that costs $200 (and you're a man, where the economy of fashion is far smaller on average), you ought to look spiff, or anyway spiffier than if you were in khakis and a t-shirt.
But that's a function of him being boring, right, not of his job per se. I mean there are plenty of boring musicians out there, leather pants notwithstanding. When the BF worked for William Morris and had to wear suits, he didn't become less interesting than when he was working at the Public and wearing jeans and he didn't become suddenly interesting again when he left th that job and stopped wearing suits--he was the same awesome guy throughout.
Doesn't that cover 90% of people who wear clothes?
I'm perfectly willing to peel that suit off George Clooney check out his, er, indifference....
Seriously, I love a well-fitted suit on a man who knows how to wear it. When I say corporate type, though, I'm talking about the culture of Big Business. Doesn't turn me on.
Of course, neither do cowboys. And emphatically neither do uniforms of any flavour. I do not love a man in uniform.
I mean there are plenty of boring musicians out there, leather pants notwithstanding
Probably. I just never hung out with any.
presumably when you're wearing an outfit that costs $200 (and you're a man, where the economy of fashion is far smaller on average), you ought to look spiff
My experience doesn't quite bear that out, but still.
Define economy of fashion for me? I thought men got off easy on that one, but I may be interpreting it differently.
I mean there are plenty of boring musicians out there, leather pants notwithstanding
Probably. I just never hung out with any.
Oy. I have. Not substantatively different from their corporate counterparts. I've never encountered more than five people in any profession and not found one of them boring.
90% of real people who wear suits wear them indifferently
Doesn't that cover 90% of people who wear clothes?
Bingo!
presumably when you're wearing an outfit that costs $200 (and you're a man, where the economy of fashion is far smaller on average), you ought to look spiff
Not if they look like they aren't comfortable, or that they're wearing a costume they aren't particularly happy about. I've seen far, far too many guys in very nice suits who give off the vibe of 'do not want to be wearing this', which ruins the whole thing. Oh, and posture. Posture & confidence are very important when wearing suits. (Okay, they're important for any clothing, dammit.)