Posts Tagged ‘NYC’

Yuna Yang’s Fashion Week Balancing Act

September 16th, 2010

Fashion Week in New York City is in full swing, and with this year’s move to Lincoln Center has fashion fanatics buzzing about the new location! While getting access to these events can be a tough feat for the ‘average joe’, PUBLIC’s own Topher Burns had an opportunity to attend the Yuna Yang show last Saturday.

Saturday’s  Yuna Yang show succeeded because it gracefully inserted itself into the tension that stretched especially taut on the day of the presentation (September 11th).

Poised between summer and fall, this season’s New York Fashion Week seems especially timed as to flirt with being irrelevant, indulgent while of course undeniably exciting, and the nexus of now.

I happen to really love fashion, but I could certainly see the author’s point when a recent Forbes article asked ” What Decade Are They Living In?”  Current events, though by no means calamitous, might seem momentous enough to require the fashion industry to adopt a more subdued public statement of its own importance.  With the heavily disputed “Ground Zero Mosque” site just a scant few miles down the road, Giselle’s triumphant stomp could certainly sound hollow to some.

Fortunately I am not one of those people who think celebrations and art aren’t appropriate in stressful times.  Pour me a mimosa and let’s get this show started!  Yuna Yang obliged on both accounts.

Her hype (pointed out by both New York Magazine and WWD as a designer to watch) is well deserved.  I found a canny complexity in her spring/summer 2011 collection: “My Black Wedding Dress”.  Yang’s inspiration, she says, came from Betty Draper.  The 60’s housewife, pulled between the traditions of the 50’s and the liberty of the 70’s, found elegant expression in Yang’s collection.  Though the pieces were modest, they were also alluring – an uneasy balance that seems especially appropriate right now.

The fuzzy grayness of a cloudy day lent a subtle glow to the lace and sequin accents that drifted down a runway at the private outdoor park of the Hudson Hotel, set to unmistakably Parisian music.

Champagne bubbles tickling my brain, I left Yuna Yang’s show singing “La Vie En Rose” to myself, even though it had not been played during the presentation.  Thinking back now, both to the collection and to its cultural context, I find that very apropos.

-Topher

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The Dog Days of Summer

July 28th, 2010

The Dog Days of Summer – the sunny season’s feverish excitement has worn
thin, and left us with a lingering stagnant heat that brings even the most devoted
New Yorkers to contemplate “I think I’m going to move to Portland.”
At PUBLIC, we hear your exasperation loud and clear. We suggest you take a
little break and treat yourself to our quick Dog Days survey.
A few laughs can be just as refreshing as an ice cream bar, and let’s be honest:
at this point of the year Haagen-Dazs doesn’t need any more of our money
anyway.

BEGIN DOG DAYS QUIZ

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Fun With Regional Stereotypes

July 27th, 2010

MTV is gearing up for the 2nd season of the increasingly popular reality show, Jersey Shore. After one season of GTL, orange friends from New Jersey are taking their show on the road to South Beach. While the show has been criticized over its blatant portrayal, everyone’s favorite shore-goers have become household names. Don’t believe me, just see who got to ring the NYSE opening bell this morning!!



Thank you Gawker for pointing out why the Jersey Shore is not a unique television phenomena – that people have just had this epiphany that watching absurd, self-enamored, extreme stereotypes is  something new. Go to any region of any party of the country, or world for that part, and you will find your JWows, Situations, and Snookis.

So let’s have a little fun why don’t we.

We shall start off not too far from the Jersey Shore and head into Maryland’s “laxer” territory. The Lax Bro is a pastel polo wearing, BMW driving, jam-band (ala Disco Bisquits) fan that uses such colloquialism as “it’s a brodeo”, or “woah – what a brohemoth”.

This next category can be found across the United States and is one of the countries most beloved stereotypes – The Hick. While there are a vast number of varieties of hicks, the term no longer is limited to uneducated, toothless people living in rural areas. In fact, the suburban hick has become quite the norm. And by this I refer to the doe hunting, Skol loving, Bourbon-based alcoholic that drives any “truck” (refers to 4 wheel drive, not a flatbed) with a lift, and refutes any ideas that question creationism or claim Harry Potter was not written by the devil. This term and its description apply to both male and females.

As we head out west, we encounter two kinds of Gnarly Brahs/Dudes – snow and surf. While initially these individuals may be confused with the Lax Bro due to the concentrated use of the word “bro” in their lexicon, the differences eventually begin to emerge. Gnarly Brahs/Dudes talk about shredding sick waves/slopes (while actually rarely doing so), live an herbal lifestyle, and admonish capitalism while shopping online for their Volcom gear.

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Regarding the emergence of The Hipster; I think this says enough for why this specific genre of individual is highly deserving of its own reality television program.

And finally, should you be interested in a more international television experience – I give you Britain’s fine “Rude Boys”. Popularized by Ali G, these track-suit wearing (tucked into their socks), gelled hair styling, house music loving individuals like to talk about pulling girls, getting into knife fights outside the chipper, and rapping. Rude Girls are equally as pugnacious and “up for it”, with the same uncanny sense of style.

So while the Jersey Shore enables Americans to embrace their infatuation with absurd stereotypes, it’s nothing new. This to shall pass for bigger poufs and better tans.

-Amelia

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