Skirted Style in Atlanta

News from High Street, for the Fashionistas among us! Couture only here please; if you can buy it off the rack, try another forum.
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TSH
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Joined: Wed Jun 15, 2022 5:10 am

Re: Skirted Style in Atlanta

Post by TSH »

I held off on writing about this topic, despite having some thoughts to express about it, because I didn't think it warranted a response. Since quite a few people have posted here, though, I figured, "Well, might as well explain what's wrong here." Let's start with what my very first problem that I have with this being on the "Couture" sub-forum when the content has nothing at all to do with couture.
mr seamstress wrote: Fri Aug 22, 2025 12:14 pm There is a Youtube video claiming men are wearing mini skirts in Atlanta as a new style.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cTFvyYjJnaI

The video is putting these men down. We can hope it is true men are on the rise in wearing skirts regardless what this person posted. We can hope this trend will pick up across America and every where else.
Who cares what some random old crone and her idiot followers say on YouTube? Why are you citing that particular video instead of linking to clips of the Atlantan men wearing said mini skirts? Almost 120k views, and the video is unanimously liked, so this hag's dimwitted, ignorant audience just nod their heads at everything she says because they're just like most other people in this world: clueless and don't actually care about equality. They just want to see this go away because they don't like it — not because it actually affects them in any way. Hell, this dingbat looks old enough to have female relatives who grew up in a time where women wearing pants was also considered taboo at one point. These assclowns should honestly just shut up forever if they can't see the parallels, here.
Here is another video. The video went viral. Men are claiming it is the latest trend to wear skirts.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JILRNORoImw
No. Having 205 views isn't going viral, unless you're referring to something that isn't an hour-and-40-minute-long podcast, which I don't even know why you have an entire podcast posted here in the first place. A bunch of rambling fools talking for a long stretch of time is exhausting, especially if it's a topic they know **** all about. It's why I don't care about podcasts, and most certainly have no interest watching something which has a title that's followed by a really stupid question. "Is It Okay to be Masculine" is a complete non-sequitur in the context of men in short skirts. It's like asking women wearing pants, "Is it okay to be feminine"? Christ, it's a ******* clothing choice, not a indicator of any sort of label or box you want to check regarding a person.
AnonUser30 wrote: Fri Aug 22, 2025 9:27 pm I just skimmed parts of the first video. It's sad to see how disapproving they are along with the comments. Some of the men she talks about have been making a splash on social media which I've been happy to see. I guess it comes with the territory that there's going to be pushback.
The way she nodded that empty head of hers was all I needed to know. YouTube comment sections are generally pretty awful, so there's no point in subjecting yourself to that torture. And this isn't just the territory itself; it's the community that engulfs it, which is what I'll touch more on with this next quote from another member.
Modoc wrote: Sun Aug 24, 2025 12:35 pm I hope it takes hold and spreads to other places.
Quote from the top video. "It may not be that much now, but it's trending. We know what happens when things start trending; other men will be doing it too".
HALLELUJAH!!!
Don't count your chickens before they hatch. It's not like this hasn't already trended before. It's very likely it'd go nowhere, as have sadly always been the case.
The videos were both unwatchable for me, but I get the idea. Men in skirts in Atlanta, GA, are getting some internet attention, albeit pretty much negative at this point. It looks like some are deciding to step up and take the heat in a community with a notoriously vocal bias.
Didn't watch them, either. Videos that have no business being posted anywhere in this forum. I emboldened the location because I need to stress this point. Atlanta has a large Black presence, making up a good 46% of the population. The juvenile, obnoxious attention it's getting is largely from other members of the Black community — a community which is known to be problematic when it comes to its exaggerated expectations of the masculine Black Man. It'd be easy just to put this Lord Jamar thread from a year ago here to make my point, but this gives me another opportunity to talk about how disillusioned I feel towards the community I'm supposed to be a part of because of my skin tone. Black men, such as myself, have been subjugated to this rigid masculine image. There's a large homophobic layer to this ideal that seeks to squash anything that could be considered feminine (i.e. a skirt), which is conditioned through religious poisoning and conservatism; feminine traits are often erroneously equated to being gay. This causes young Black males who happen to gay, effeminate, or both, to be considered cultural outlaws. Trying to find a supportive group that doesn't enable homophobia (the Black community) or racism (the White gay community). People here might find this soliloquy to be out of the scope of this thread, but then this thread shouldn't haven't been posted on the Couture sub-forum in the first place. The point here is that, even though I don't live in Georgia (glad I wasn't born in the South), I still understand at least part of the backlash these Black men are going through because I was a target of it, and it didn't even involve skirts at all, but it would've been much worse if it did.
I remember the sagging pants drama that went on for over 20 years, starting pretty much the same way. The more it was decried the more traction it gained in certain communities. I plan to continue in my own way with my own style of skirts, but I applaud those who are willing to take the heat to push society's buttons about what men are allowed to wear.
Ah, yes. Sagging. It effectively showed millennials to be among the dumbest of generations to ever exist. The fact that what was a common inmate uniform issue of oversized clothing not fitting certain prisoners became this idiotic trend of people not knowing how to put on a damn belt, and decades later, we're still in this piss-test of trying to change people's minds about men in skirts shows that we were already doomed a long time ago. Is there a species with even more propensity for stupidity than humans? I would love to know.
AnonUser30 wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 3:53 pm You can follow this guy on Instagram. His username is @ai.cashh He's continuing to post content everyday of him wearing his skirts. With over 300K followers, he's probably doing more to steer the needle than anyone on this forum....
300k followers on Instagram isn't that impressive when there were people before him who had much more in other social media platforms, but did very little to give MiS momentum. Also, a lot of the user base here comprises people much older than him. Also, members here are still trying to get some kind of support from the people closest to them. Some are busy trying to get through life day-by-day. Some have been negatively affected by their experience wearing skirts, and decided the human race isn't worth ****. I'm somewhere in-between those last two things, but I'm also second one, as well.
crfriend wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 8:31 pm
STEVIE wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 6:10 pmPlease note that false optimism does nothing for our cause either.
Of note is that we do not know Mr. S's location. I can see it being somewhat positive if he dwells in a developed country; however, if he dwells in a country with a backwards societal structure and substantial retrograde motion, then the optimism is entirely misplaced and borders on the dangerous.
Uncle Al wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 10:42 pm
crfriend wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 8:31 pmOf note is that we do not know Mr. S's location. I can see it being somewhat positive if
he dwells in a developed country; however, if he dwells in a country with a backwards
societal structure and substantial retrograde motion, then the optimism is entirely
misplaced and borders on the dangerous.
After a bit of sleuthing, I've found he is located in the hills of southern Kentucky,
South-South East of Lexington, and almost due North of Knoxville, TN.
He has indicated, in several of his posts, that he is in Kentucky.

Uncle Al
:mrgreen: :ugeek: :mrgreen:
Kentucky. Another cesspit of the "Bible Belt". Mr. Seamstress's confidence is even further called into question. I remember us both interacting together a while back. I essentially told him not to set himself for disappointment by just latching on to anything that even alludes to men in skirts. It seems none of what I said stuck with him.
mr seamstress wrote: Wed Aug 27, 2025 6:04 am
crfriend wrote: Tue Aug 26, 2025 8:31 pm
Of note is that we do not know Mr. S's location. I can see it being somewhat positive if he dwells in a developed country; however, if he dwells in a country with a backwards societal structure and substantial retrograde motion, then the optimism is entirely misplaced and borders on the dangerous.
All I'm saying is the jury is still out. Shouldn't rush in making a judgement.
Exactly, so you should stop getting your hopes up over (probably) nothing.
We have different fashion trends started by an influencer, such as wearing hoodies during summer months. I'm waiting to see if the trend moves to other cities.
This isn't a fashion trend, and people were stupidly wearing weather-inappropriate clothing for a long, long time now.
Don't get me wrong here; I'm not holding my breath.
I know a person that works at local store here and will be going to Atlanta to see her sick father in hospital there this weekend. I ask her if she sees men running around in mini skirts while she is there.
Did she give a look of disgust?
Aicashh.com seems base upon more to LGBT communities than the straight man.
That should just be obvious. Straight men don't want to be labeled as gay, because society is apparently too stupid not to conflate two unrelated things.
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