Welp,erotization or eroticization looks like bootcut jeans are back, according to a GQ article that claims as much.
Though people have been quick to step in and renounce GQ's latest style prediction, taking to Twitter to air their many frustrations with this alleged fashion revival.
The biggest qualm is that example of "bootcut jeans" in the article's photo is more akin to the bell bottoms of the early aughts than actual bootcut jeans. Not to mention, the person sporting them looks fucking miserable.
I mean, just look at him:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Bootcut jeans are bad.
People have not been shy about expressing their dismay, mocking the unattractive jean form, and emphasizing the importance of ending this supposed trend before it starts to catch on.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Fortunately, I don't think anyone needs to worry about seeing bootcut jeans out in the wild anytime soon.
I Have Wasted My LifeRedux: Spellbinders by The Paris ReviewSam Altman 'hurt and angry' after OpenAI firing. But here’s why he went back anyway.Gift idea for teens: Save 31% on the Canon Ivy 2 Mini Photo Printer at AmazonStaff Picks: Decadence, Doodles, and Deep Ends by The Paris ReviewIs It Ever Okay to Depict Muhammad? by Michael Muhammad KnightGoogle announces top apps and games of 2023 on Google PlaySelika, Mystery of the Belle EpoqueNew Gen AI tool transforms your favorite memes into videos — here are our top 6Ode to GrayMeeting Eve Babitz by Lili AnolikOn Randy Travis’s Distinctive Whine by Drew BratcherPoetry Rx: Your Body Will Haunt Mine by Claire SchwartzMonsieur Bébé: The Brief, Strange Life of Raymond RadiguetWas Holly Golightly Bisexual? by Rebecca RennerDaddy Issues: Renoir Père and Fils by Cody DelistratyHow to add your zodiac sign to your Hinge profileWordle today: The answer and hints for November 30Redux: Spellbinders by The Paris ReviewPoetry Rx: Your Body Will Haunt Mine by Claire Schwartz Solve These Word Puzzles and Win a Free Subscription Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Lydia Davis Will Receive Our 2016 Hadada Award Umberto Eco: “How to Travel with a Salmon” Klaus Wittkugel, East German Master of Book Design Our New Spring Issue: Interviews with Luc Sante, Robert Caro “The Unnecessary,” A Poem by Karen Murai (1990) What Havoc Did “Under the Tuscan Sun” Wreak on the Culture? Painting a Poem—Diane Szczepaniak’s Watercolors & Wallace Stevens The Art of America’s Elusive Secret Societies David Szalay Wins Plimpton Prize; Chris Bachelder Wins Southern Prize Staff Picks: Bissell, Panter, Aridjis, Krasznahorkai Adventures at the Ninety “The Witch” and Its Distortions of Puritanism Poem: “After the Loss of a Limb,” Elena Wilkinson, 1974 An Erotic Advertisement From Our Archive Not Sorry: An Interview with Jeremy M. Davies Memento Mori: How Salesmen Sold Tombstones in the 1920s The Perils of Sadie Hawkins Day (When Your Name Is Sadie) “Nasty Girl”: Part 2—Continuing the Reluctant Exegesis
2.3684s , 8260.578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【erotization or eroticization】,Charm Information Network