Barleymower wrote: ↑Fri Feb 03, 2023 7:16 pm
https://forums.thefashionspot.com/threa ... rts.51741/
I look most days to see if there's any progress on the MIS front. I thought instead I would look at life for MIS 20 years ago on the street.
Here's an article from 2003 where Michael Brick spends the day in a skirt in New York to gauge the reaction. It's a publicity stunt for the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened a display called "Bravehearts: Men in Skirts," documenting the absence of reciprocity in the borrowing of clothing styles across gender lines.
Above the cat calling and the teasing there are lots of interesting comments after the article from 2003 which show how far we have come eg:
Men wore skirts before women.
We want equality!
Its hard to distinguish if its "fashion" or "fetish".
No men in skirts! The whole metrosexual thing is too femme by far.

Manly men, please.
No such thing as dressing as your sex much anymore.
People felt exactly the same 20 years ago but
attitudes have moved forward.
Have they, though? It's hard to tell.
Regardless, this should've been happening 20 years ago, instead of within the last two, three, or whatever years. It's bad enough certain male celebrities (i.e. Brad Pitt) get shamed for wearing a skirt — as if somehow advocating for and supporting people to wear all types of clothing, no matter their sex/gender, is somehow being "woke" or some form of "humiliation ritual", but reading these comments on this very thread and taking a glance on the first page of the thread you linked tells me that even the attitudes aren't any different. Some are supportive, many are fueled by ignorance and hypocrisy. It's amazing how people still don't understand the irony right in front of their faces. It's more of a exposure deal to me, rather than a shift in perspective.
This comment caught my eye:
The whole metrosexual thing is too femme by far.
Right, because this is DEFINITELY feminine:
I know this was nearly 20 years ago, but it doesn't make it any less stupid (and wrong).