And of course the name, involving a Spanish-Tagalog-English-Japanese linguistic clash, is pretty awesome in itself. These videos show some of the more mainstream, high-end jejemons, all wearing "jejecaps" and a variety of fun, colourful street clothing.
Note the distinct lack of actual Skinny Jeans in the second video. One web store defines jejemon wear as:
Jejecap - the jejecaps are rainbow colored caps. Bright/colorful t-shirt or tops (fit) Belt with much bigger buckle than the usual Metal chain, necklace and bracelet Colorful wristband Skinny Jeans (preferrably shiny/glossy and dark) Rubber shoes (at least 2-colored)Which I guess is alright, but one fashion style I've really been much more intrigued by (which I can barely find any picture evidence of) is the kind worn by the boy second from the left in the bottom row of this picture:
And all of the guys in this picture, ignore the vile sentiment expressed in the caption:
It's Tupac-meets-football-socks, and the closest I've seen any skinny-jeansers come to actual leggings, which is surely the next step.
Now please bring on the "self-branding means they're all capitalist stooges" critiques.
1 comment:
Ha! Nice one. This is some research gold from my perspective. Thanks, Birdseed (and for the trackback también).
A pretty interesting permutation to be sure. I can see why the seeming cut-n-paste acts of global skinnyjeans youth culture looks like zombie capitalism to some, but I tend to find that critique a little shortsighted myself.
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