I never got that. Wasn't there a Cosby show episode where Cliff shyt on Vanessa for wanting some designer ripped jeans
We weren't rocking that shyt in the 80s, 90s, or early to mid 2000s. Stop. I picked out my own clothes, mixing and matching styles to create
my own aesthetic. I like to call my style sophisticated hood wear or intelligent d-boy attire.
I don't do the ripped look. But my jeans are skinny / fitted.
Not everyone can pull it off. But I have a unique physique that can.
I don't do the ripped look. But my jeans are skinny / fitted.
Not everyone can pull it off. But I have a unique physique that can.
Nothing batty about my appearance though. I look masculine as heck.Oh lord, save these young men from a society of batty driven influence
I'm muscular, With big quads. Nothing moist about my appearance. There's definitely some shyt out there, but then there's brehs like me who it right.I wear fitted Baldwins that some of my brehs clown for looking like "skinny" jeans, but they're loose enough not to look moist.
Nah, it is corny and wild mango.It's just a pair of jeans on a shop rack, take it easy.
You're a follower with no independent sense of style, a person who rolls with the herd, someone devoid of an identity that wasn't modeled off what you viewed while watching television or browsing the web. When did this
become acceptable for men to wear? Who said that this fakkitry was the wave? All I see in each of these examples, no matter how much money the men featured might have, is insecurity and a style defined by what others have approved. I guarantee that the men who attract the most women are those who don't dress like this, whose style is a reflection of their persona and identity rather than the trends of the moment, who ride uncharted currents that haven't yet been found by the guppies.