your slow hung-over... in a night out in the neighborhood.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

My problems with Vivienne Westwood



Vivienne Westwood is a fashion legend. But what happened? Perez Hilton's remarks on his blog just said it. What is up with the plus sized hairy models. Is she setting up the new trend, or staging the old trend that she is planning to come back: the stubble facial hair and the hairy old folk chest?

At least she gave Sarah Jessica Parker her wedding dress for Sex and the City then I'm fine with anything. Still, she's weird like Yohji but I like Yohji. Designers are weird.

[Photo: New York Magazine Fashion]

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Quotes Redesigned #1

Discipline is the best medicine.

If "laughter is the best medicine, wouldn't you go crazy?" The sane depletes and the mind disintegrates: no focus!

Friday, June 27, 2008

No party at Embassy.







Embassy Independence Day Party said:


The right to party. The right to get drunk. The right to stay sober. The right to puke. The right to mispel wurds. The right to take a shit. The right to play. The right to care. The right to give a damn. The right to be repetitive. The right to celebrate. The right to surf. The right to be right. The right to murder bloggers in their sleep. The right to suck. The right to spit. The right to swallow. The right to sleep. With anyone, anywhere. The right to be gone in the morning. The right to a one night stand. The right to break hearts. The right to be vain. The right to call in sick. The right to sing. The right to shop. The right to wear Gucci. The right to get hot. The right to smoke tobacco. The right to smoke bacon. The right to vote. The right to chat. The right to lie. The right to left. The right to grow hair. The right to make love, not war. The right to be inspired. The right to be gay. The right to rock n’ roll. The right to sing in the shower. The right to fake an orgasm. The right to make a difference. The right to be free.

Ministry of Fun invites you to celebrate 110 years of Philippine independence at Embassy.

Countdown begins 11 June 2008 11:59 pm


-----

My message after Embassy was closed:

Where art thou is the right? My right to go to Alchemy Manila.

See related articles at Manila Standard and Philippine Daily Inquirer.

[Photos from Jenni Epperson]

My problems with Yohji Yamamoto


Milan Fashion Week Men's Wear has totally blown my mind. I can't wait to see if Paris Fashion Week Men's Wear can match the excitement. I also can't wait to see Viktor and Rolf Collection.

I am currently viewing and reviewing the presentations of Milan. I will tell you my favorite collections tomorrow. Anyway, what is up with Yohji Yamamoto? I do not understand the non-conforming non-mainstream presentation. I wish someone can explain to me.

Tim Blanks interviewed him backstage and Yohji said that his collection is about happiness: "My message, let's be happy." However, I am on the low key just by watching his collection. What's up Yohji?

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Obsession of the Season: Oakley Frogskins

Oakley Frogskins are the best limited edition sunglasses that I have ever seen! I want to have them all but only 3000 are made and will be distributed worldwide. So is this goodbye plane ticket... hello oakley frogskins? Check out some of the colors:
Oakley Frogskin Dalmatian Grey Lens
Oakley Frogskin Matte Grey Grey Lens
Oakley Frogskin Matte Red Grey Lens
Oakley Frogskin Polarized Black Grey Lens
And my favorite is the Neon Yellow Fire Iridium Lens. So cool!


[Photos by Konasports]

GQ: The 50 most stylish men of the past 50 years, 4/10

...and what you can learn from them.

Part 4 of 10


Photo: Eve Arnold/Magnum Photos

Malcolm X

After six years in prison, Malcolm X emerged a completely changed man—not least in the way he dressed. Whereas he once ran the streets in a brightly colored zoot suits—the hustler’s uniform—he now wore sober, monochromatic suits with narrow lapels and skinny ties, often topped off by stingy-brimmed fedoras. “As a minister in the Nation of Islam, you had to present yourself in a certain way,” says Ruth E. Carter, the costume designer on Spike Lee’s 1992 bio-pic. For Carter, who tracked down the artisan who made his star-and-crescent ring (“He wanted to show people he was pure in his faith,” she says), Malcolm X’s style was consistent and transparent, a window into the substance of his character and message. “He believed that if you present yourself with respect, then people will respect you—and that’s what he did. He gained the respect of millions.”

• A short-brimmed fedora is heroic and hip. And you might have noticed, they’re also back in style—whether in wool (for the winter) or straw (for the summer).


Photo: Topham/The Image Works

Yves Saint-Laurent

In 1954, a wool-trade group held its design contest in Paris—a sort of Project Runway for the ’50s—and the winner of the dress category was a shy, gangly 18-year-old from Algeria. He was tall and slim, almost hiding behind his creation in a skinny suit and wire-framed glasses. But the competition’s prestige helped get him a job at Christian Dior, and that was all Yves Mathieu-Saint-Laurent needed. In three years, Monsieur Dior, France’s most cherished designer, was dead at the age of 52, and Saint-Laurent, at just 21 years old, took the reins. He found some aggressive horn-rimmed glasses and, after his first collection, was hailed by the French press as the savior of haute couture. Saint-Laurent ultimately asserted himself as his own brand. He loosened his collar, relaxing into hashish and caftans in Marrakech, and by 1971, in ads for his men’s cologne, he even posed nude. His hair had grown out, but he looked right into the camera, wearing nothing but those signature glasses.

• Find a signature item and stick with it. Saint-Laurent wore a version of these bold glasses throughout his career.


Photo: 1978 Sanford Roth/AMPAS/MPTV

Paul Newman

During the 1950s and ’60s, the early years of a career that spanned more than half a century, Paul Newman did his best on-screen work in a tight undershirt and slacks. This ensemble, which was often accessorized by a cigarette and a glass of bourbon (preferably J.T.S. Brown, neat), was tailor-made for the collection of misfits, hustlers, and broken-down drunks that Newman immortalized. Offscreen, Newman was thoughtful, dignified, decent—a family man. He may have represented the ideal of what a man should look like in a tuxedo, but he was at his best in a V-neck sweater or an oxford cloth button-down shirt and plain-front trousers. According to Newman’s publicist and friend of more than fifty years, Warren Cowan, “After Paul won the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1993, he had a bonfire with his tuxedo because he said he never wanted to wear a black tie again. Shortly after, he gave away his entire wardrobe. He’s down to just a few pairs of slacks and cords, a few shirts and sweaters. He says his life is much simpler. He’s much happier.”

• Go buy a white oxford cloth button-down-collar dress shirt. Now. You can wear one with a suit or a blazer, or with jeans, cords, or khakis.


Photo: Yulsman/Globe Photos

Jack Kerouac

Flower power was all well and good, but Jack Kerouac often wondered aloud how the Beats could’ve given birth to such Technicolor bravura. Kerouac’s look was broken but unbowed—as he once said: “ragged, beatific, beautiful in an ugly graceful new way.” And yet his aesthetic is everywhere today: That Brooklyn hipster rocking overalls under his Carhartt jacket while reading Hart Crane? That kid in San Francisco sporting scuffed oxfords and a frayed collar, with Madame Bovary stuffed in his back pocket? They’re paying unwitting tribute to the man who exploded the 1950s world of straight-white pretensions, rejecting the notion that class was synonymous with value. An uneven artist perhaps, and a troubled one to be sure, but unequivocally a man: the originator of blue-collar cool.

• Personal style isn’t about buying the trendiest labels or most expensive suits. It’s about establishing a look that’s all yours and sticking with it.


Photo: Herb Ritts/Lime Foto

Johnny Depp

After almost a quarter century in front of the camera, Johnny Depp has shown us everything but himself. Not an easy task when you’ve got those cheekbones, that tousled hair, and an unmitigated youthfulness, which Depp has worked hard to cloak by playing reclusive savants and rock ’n’ roll pirates. But we keep searching, trying to nail down his hobo chic—a style that derives from a life spent kicking around the dusty South and the French countryside. “I don’t think he’s remotely interested in fashion. He’s a complete instigator of fashion,” says Penny Rose, the costume designer who collaborated with the actor to create Pirates of the Caribbean’s randy Jack Sparrow. “His look is always eye-stopping, clever, and completely individual.” Or, like the last two drags on one of his hand-rolled cigarettes, raw and unapologetically gratifying.

• A tweak here and there can elevate even the simplest outfits. Notice the rolled-up sleeves, the neckpiece, the beat-up boots instead of sneakers. Small moves like these separate you from the pack.

Written and Reported by Andy Comer, Hilary Elkins, Alex French, David Gargill, Randy Hartwell, Howie Kahn, Cole Louison, Laurence Lowe, Trent MacNamara, Jordan Reed, and Luke Zaleski

Saturday, June 21, 2008

The summer solstice



In my childhood, I believed and was amazed by heavenly bodies. I even wondered if there are other Earths out there. I memorized and put to heart the nine planets that then revolves around the sun. I even singled out my older cousins on facts about the planets: its rotation, revolution, weight, distance from the sun, etc. I was so amazed that everything I knew from the books I read cover to cover has become stagnant in years. There weren't new facts anymore aside from the constant launching of space rockets. People were more interested in nuclear weapons or UFOs.

Until a few months ago, I found out the new eleven planets: It really stunned me for a couple of minutes.

I think it's time for a new enlightenment. The summer solstice is here.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

If this was Philippine Fashion Week 2007...

...would you have any interest to watch for Philippine Fashion Week 2008?



Would you call this resourcefulness?

Go Team Canada!

Hyped for the Olympics!

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Ed Navarro is dat chu?

It has been awhile since I talked to a lot of people from Silliman U. Thanks to Mark Zuckerberg, named one of Time Magazine's 100 most influencial people of the world and the creator of Facebook, through him, connecting with friends has become easier as Instant Messenger. Browsing the Harvard graduate's online community innovation, I found updates from my friends at Silliman. Though not alot of them has yet created their accounts on Facebook, the seemingly few updates are quite surprising and I can say that many had changed.

Take for example this former friend of mine. I last saw him during my CSO days but now I can't seem to recognize him. It is just me, or does that guy really looked like Ed Navarro?

A few years ago, I did too walked the hair looking like a Bee Gee or Rolling Stone member.

Fishhhy!



I think I also knew this girl. She's Galee's sister, isn't she?



This is the funniest picture from the album. It tickled my throat! (Ed is Miranda.)



Photos by Rey Sarraga.

Monday, June 16, 2008

GQ: The 50 most stylish men of the past 50 years, 3/10

...and what you can learn from them.

Part 3 of 10


Photo: Laura Wilson

Richard Avedon

When he died at 81, while on assignment in 2004, Richard Avedon was as famous and beautiful as any of his photographs. “You’ve got to ask yourself, How could one man be the author of so many of the iconic images of the twentieth century?” says David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker, where the photographer worked for nearly sixty years. “We remember his Marilyn, his Ezra Pound, his Bert Lahr, his practically everyone.… Avedon’s enthusiasm was so winning and so seductive that he got people to do everything.” Avedon was a nearsighted high school dropout from the Bronx whose crew cut soon grew into a smooth, silvery mane and whose black frames became a trademark, protecting the ever peering eyes that never lost contact with their subject—he stood left of his camera, never behind it. “And if he ever blinked,” adds Remnick, “I missed it.”

• A safari shirt works as well in the city as it does in the field. It’s rugged but elegant.


Photo: Tim Auger/Retna LTD

Beck

Most of us met Beck shortly after the 23-year-old used an eight-track recorder, a drumbeat, and a slide guitar to lay down a Billboard Top 10 hit and generational anthem called “Loser.” Then he couldn’t get away from the song fast enough, declining to play it live and fleeing back to the studio. When he resurfaced with Odelay, which went platinum, he cemented his reputation as a Dylan of our time and reminded us that the only constant with Beck is change. The same goes for the man’s style. “It’s kind of derelict,” he once told GQ. “But I embrace it.” Whether he’s at a thrift shop in Paris or a design studio in Japan (the fashion of the two places, like the Dior suits he wears, best fit his slim frame), Beck balances the cool with the fun, with a nod to the old while creating the new.

• A suit is always appropriate—especially when worn out of the office. And so what if you’ve got long hair? The contrast makes that much more of a statement.


Photo: Thomas Hoepker/Magnum Photos

Muhammad Ali

It’s no accident that in 1997, Christie’s sold a robe of Muhammad Ali’s for $156,500. The three-time world heavyweight champ displayed the same greatness stepping onto the canvas as he did rhyming his way through a press conference or high-fiving his way through the streets of Zaire—and he always looked far better doing so than anyone in his swarming entourage. Although flamboyantly charismatic in and out of the ring, Ali favored a more classic wardrobe. The dark suits, white shirts, narrow ties, and buffed shoes gave him a look that traced back to his roots as a churchgoing boy in Louisville. “I don’t follow fashion so much as I try to find clothes that make me look good,” Ali told GQ recently. “Because that never goes out of style.”

• Wear a slim dark suit, white shirt, and dark tie, and you’ll look like a champ. That’s really all you need to know. It’s that simple.


Photo: INF Photo

Tom Brady

After thirty years on earth and seven seasons as quarterback of the New England Patriots, here is what Tom Brady has shown us he can do: Win. Handle pressure. Take a hit. Lead a team. Call the shots. Command respect. Show respect. Get the girl. Look good on the red carpet. Look even better on the green. Sign a big contract. Turn down a bigger one. Drop back. Go deep. Dress well. Live well. Give back. Look ahead. Come from behind. Scramble. Stay loose. Have fun. Give credit where credit is due. Play the game. Go to Disney World. Learn from his mistakes. Accept defeat. Inspire confidence. Grace the cover of GQ. Host Saturday Night Live. Laugh at himself. Get a laugh. Dance. Sing. Well, no, he can’t sing. But they say John Kennedy couldn’t carry a tune, either.

• If you want to be taken seriously, pay as much attention to your hair as your suit. You’re going to be judged from head to toe.


Photo: Pressens Bild/IPOL/Globe Photos

Bjƶrn Borg

Few have dominated their sport like Bjƶrn Borg did. The slender Swede chalked up eleven grand-slam titles from ’74 to ’81, grinding his victims down with his legendary stamina, making what was actually a methodical approach to the game seem relentless and fierce. This is the man who made tracksuits cool and put Fila on the map. “I never thought of myself as a style icon,” Borg has said, “though I can see that the way I dressed and how people looked at me created that.” And whether it was intentional or not, Borg came to typify, almost to the point of caricature—thank you, Luke Wilson, in The Royal Tenenbaums—the at once worldly and laid-back ethos of an era. He made luxe look comfortable and easy. And why shouldn’t it be when you’re young, gifted, and living the high life in Monte Carlo?

• Long hair works best when it’s loose and easy. You don’t want a coif or a do—you are not a member of Poison or Warrant.

Written and Reported by Andy Comer, Hilary Elkins, Alex French, David Gargill, Randy Hartwell, Howie Kahn, Cole Louison, Laurence Lowe, Trent MacNamara, Jordan Reed, and Luke Zaleski

GQ: The 50 most stylish men of the past 50 years, 2/10

...and what you can learn from them.

Part 2 of 10


Photo: HD/Camera Press/Retna LTD

Bob Dylan

Remember young Guthrie-ite Dylan, the one with the beatnik blue jeans, denim shirt, and corduroy driving hat? Or how about the powder-faced imp headlining The Last Waltz under a floppy pimp lid? Through the decades, Bob Dylan has always tapped into the fashions of the times. “He’s a rotating type,” says documentarian D. A. Pennebaker, who made 1967’s Don’t Look Back. “It never works to try to pin him down.” There was also Biker Bob (see Highway 61 Revisited), who said, “I’ve had black leather jackets since I was 5 years old.” And then there was his other favorite accoutrement—those jet-black shades: “You buy them off the rack, if they fit, and you put them on.” The point is, Dylan’s ever changing style was one of discovery. “There was an air of expectancy. He was there to find out what was going on. And his choice of clothes relates to that,” says Pennebaker. “He was trying to figure out who he was.” He was all those things, and none of them.

• Ray-Ban Wayfarers will always be in style. The look worked for Dylan and Ali, it worked for Cruise, and it’s working now for every band on the planet and every fashion-minded guy in town.


Photo: Birds of Paradise Lizzie Himmel

Basquiat

“You know how Thelonious Monk used to make all the picture frames on his wall crooked? Basquiat was like that—deliberately asymmetrical,” says GQ’s Style Guy, Glenn O’Brien, of his late friend, the downtown New York painter Jean-Michel Basquiat. “He had a great eye, so he would find quirky things.” Basquiat soon went from picking through bins at vintage shops to walking the runway for designer friends like Rei Kawakubo, the founder of Comme des GarƧons. Yet even as an art star, Basquiat kept his eccentricities intact. “He’d buy an Armani suit and then go paint in it,” O’Brien says. “Or he’d dress like an African prince—a cross between what a Yoruban king would wear and what you might find at Givenchy. Jean-Michel had a regal air about him—he could put on anything and look good because his style came from within. To me, he was always a prince.”

• Traditional clothes don’t have to be traditional. When you’ve got dreads and plenty of attitude, that striped tie and toggle coat become downtown cool instead of East Coast prep school.


Photo: Alfred Wertheimer/Photokunst

Elvis Presley

Elvis may have been more about bling and booze in his later years, but early on—according to Bernard Lansky, self-proclaimed clothier to the King—his style was always “clean as Ajax.” A hard thing to pull off as a muddy Mississippi white boy who popularized a defiantly black way of dressing—pegged pants, hi-boy collars, immaculate hair, and the plaid jacket that Lansky tailored for Elvis’s star-turning appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. The King set the sartorial tone for Jerry Lee Lewis and a host of other Memphis rock ’n’ roll legends, all of whom made Lansky’s men’s shop the place to go if you were an up-and-coming musician. And though he may have gone Vegas in later years, Elvis ultimately returned to his roots. “I picked the white linen suit, blue shirt, and white tie he was buried in,” says Lansky, one of the honorary pallbearers at Presley’s funeral. “It was sharp.”

• A knit tie will never go out of style. The Beatles wore them when they got off the plane at JFK (black ones, with square-cut bottoms), and you can still buy any number of versions today.


Photo: AP Photo/Antonio Calanni

George Clooney

You’ve heard it all before, right? George Clooney is smart, handsome, funny. Oh, and he makes a suit look “simply fantastic.” (We didn’t say it; Giorgio Armani did.) But the wisecracking rogue that women (and men) love to love traveled a long road to get here. Let’s not forget that before interning at ER, he played the floppy-haired Booker on Roseanne and paid the bills as a handyman on The Facts of Life. It’s all a testament to that old saw about men getting better looking (and just plain better) with age. Which is why these days Clooney not only writes, directs, produces, and actually acts (hello, Oscar!) but also carries a dark suit and a head of silver-flecked hair better than anyone. But we don’t dare call him a fashion plate. His pal Armani knows better: “He wears the clothes; they don’t wear him.”

• Go gray. Just be sure to keep your hair on the trim side and dress like a gentleman—not a frat boy. You’re no longer in college.


Photo: Mick Rock

Bryan Ferry

“Other bands wanted to wreck hotel rooms,” Bryan Ferry once commented. “Roxy Music wanted to redecorate them.” As the swooningly handsome frontman of that groundbreaking art-rock band, Ferry exerted no small influence on his fellow Brits (among them David Bowie). His solo career upped the ante, with each record cover seeming to announce an iconic—and trendsetting—new persona: the elegant, white-tuxedo-jacketed crooner of 1973’s Another Time, Another Place; the floppy-haired, St-Tropez-lounging rogue of ’74’s Let’s Stick Together (Duran Duran took notes); and the leather-blazer-and-skinny-tie hipster on ’78’s The Bride Stripped Bare (ditto for Franz Ferdinand). Ferry’s suave elegance hasn’t diminished as he’s transitioned to tweedy country gentleman. And of course, he’s still the ultimate ladies’ man, dating a woman more than thirty years his junior. His advice on how to charm the fairer sex? “Obviously, play my records for them,” he says, laughing. “That would be a very good start. And lots of money.”

• Dress seasonally. In the summertime, shift to lighter weight—and lighter color—suits. Think cotton, not wool.

Written and Reported by Andy Comer, Hilary Elkins, Alex French, David Gargill, Randy Hartwell, Howie Kahn, Cole Louison, Laurence Lowe, Trent MacNamara, Jordan Reed, and Luke Zaleski

Happy Birthday Tupac!

The man, the myth, the legend: Tupac Shakur!





Friendster's most annoying bitches

They're hot, for sure! Well they should be, if not they'll just become some ugly SPAM mails. And by the way, expect them every 12 hours: they are that annoying!

How to amp your style in 30 days: My Day 1

I have a new favorite site but it's a secret (although you can guess it by finding it among the links on the right side of this blog). Now, while scrolling, I found this "How to amp your style in 30 days". I don't exactly need this kind of medicine, however, I think I could benefit from this through adaptation. I just started today, so June 16 is my Day 1 of amping my style.

-----

Know Your Size
DAY 1: Monday, June 16, 2008
By Adam Rapoport, GQ Style Editor

Let's start with suits. They're the building blocks of your style upgrade, and every guy needs a few in his closet. (We'll tell you exactly how many and which ones, by the way, on Day 5.) But if you've ever set foot in a department store, you know that the choices can be overwhelming, frustrating, and flat-out confusing. That's where GQ's expert fashion team comes in. Over the next five days, we'll break down the essentials of finding the perfect suit and show you how to take control of the situation.

In today's video, we'll consider something that sounds obvious but is not. The most crucial element of a suit is its fit, and not many sales guys understand how a suit should fit or, more specifically, how you want yours to fit. Before you step into a dressing room, get a handle on the various components of a suit.

GQ: The 50 most stylish men of the past 50 years, 1/10

...and what you can learn from them.

Part 1 of 10


Photo: Bert Stern/Stanley Wise Gallery

Marcello Mastroianni

No matter how many times he played the antihero, Marcello Mastroianni never could shake free of the “Latin lover” tag; the guy was helplessly cool. As Marcello in La Dolce Vita, he’s needy, indecisive and sexually confused, but it’s Mastroianni—the man, not the character—who wears the hell out of that slim black suit and makes you forget the surgeon general’s warning every time he takes a narrow-eyed drag from his cigarette. Offscreen Mastroianni’s taste in clothes was classic and conservative. Every year he ordered a dozen suits—in English materials only—from his Roman tailor, Vittorio Zenobi, and his first stop in Paris was always John Lobb, the venerable English bootery. “The day when everyone is very, very elegant,” Mastroianni told GQ in 1964, “I will start to go around dressed like a tramp.” He lived thirty-two more years—never happened.

• A white French-cuff shirt makes the gentleman. But be sure to keep the cuff links simple—the boldness of the cuffs makes enough of a statement.


Photo: Photoshot

Steve McQueen

In 1974, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., and Liza Minnelli asked Steve McQueen to attend a fund-raiser for an actor named James Stacy, who had lost an arm and a leg in a motorcycle accident. It was a black-tie affair, and all of the biggest names in show business—Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds, John Lennon—were in attendance. McQueen showed up in a plaid Benetton lumberjack shirt, blue jeans, boots, and a long beard. It was vintage McQueen. The star of The Great Escape and Bullitt achieved icon status because of the girls, the cars, and the tough-guy persona. But writer James Wolcott’s description of McQueen as a “surf bum–hippie” is most fitting. McQueen was at his best when he looked like he’d just washed up on the beach. His rugged, dressed-down style—dungarees, V-neck T-shirts, wrinkled oxford shirts—perfectly complemented his dusty blond hair, china blue eyes, and hard, almost weathered features.

• The simpler the better. You don’t need bold patterns or loud colors to make a style statement. A perfect-fitting T-shirt and a great pair of black wraparound shades will do just fine.


Photo: Terry O’Neill/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

David Bailey

In 1962, David Bailey was a 24-year-old British photographer embarking on his first foreign assignment, a New York shoot with his then girlfriend, model Jean Shrimpton. He received some instructions: “Remember, you will be representing Vogue, so do not wear your black leather jacket in the St. Regis Hotel.” Nice try. Shrimpton remembers that “when we arrived at the airport, we were both dressed completely in leather.” Hardly surprising, considering they were the tremors causing Swinging London’s fashion and music youthquake. In fact, Antonioni used Bailey as his inspiration for the lead fashion-photographer character in his legendary document of the period, Blowup. Bailey penetrated the world of high fashion with a combination of balls and fearless style: fur-lined coats, tight trousers, and perfectly tailored suits. Iconic as Bailey’s photos became, it was usually the man behind the camera who was the most striking subject in the room.

• The white tank-top T-shirt will never lose its cool. Every man goes through his phase of wearing one.


Photo: 1970 Sus/Retna LTD

George Best

Before Becks there was Best. The dark-haired boy wonder from Belfast hijacked English football when he debuted for Manchester United in 1963, becoming a soccer sensation, celebrity, and sex symbol in short order. Whether it was his Beatles-inspired haircut, slim suits, or Chelsea boots, his style reflected and defined the times. He always kept current, from the crisp lines of mod to the rococo collars and peak lapels of ’70s London. Bestie inspired the 1966 Kinks classic “Dedicated Follower of Fashion,” and as his legend grew, his life came to revolve less around the pitch than discotheques and parties. “I spent a lot of money on booze, birds, and fast cars,” Best once said. “The rest I just squandered.”

• Women love a torso-hugging vest. Buy one on its own, or pick up a three-piece suit and doff the jacket.


Photo: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

David Bowie

From the Kabuki-inspired androgyny of Ziggy Stardust to the crisply tailored modern rock star as one-man corporation, David Bowie’s ever shifting personae influenced entire musical genres, not to mention wildly successful reinvention experts like Madonna. And even when his performance-art motifs have threatened to overshadow his talents as a musician, Bowie has always rebounded in song, never succumbing to style over substance. Perhaps Moby said it best in 2005: “I can’t think of any other musician in the twentieth century who has impacted popular culture and music more than David Bowie.” And did we mention he’s been married to a supermodel for fifteen years? Just wanted to throw that in.

• The skinnier the tie, the louder the (style) performance. And isn’t it funny how what looked sharp forty years ago still looks sharp today?

Written and Reported by Andy Comer, Hilary Elkins, Alex French, David Gargill, Randy Hartwell, Howie Kahn, Cole Louison, Laurence Lowe, Trent MacNamara, Jordan Reed, and Luke Zaleski

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The presence or absence of a #1 Dad.



I wish I had a number one Dad. The dad that gives me a reason to buy a tie.

In this season of Father's Day, I envy my friends who is trying their best or at least giving effort in finding a gift for their dad on Father's Day. Although I stay away and create alibis so that I can't go with them and look for "the gift" because I might just feel jealous, I forward them links like five presents for dad that are better than ties so that at least I was of help in their short-term dilemma on gift-buying. Even if I'm one of those lazy friends who would suggest that a tie would suffice as a gift because it is one of those moments that I may have ran out of ideas, however, knowing the innocent taste of friends and the dilly dally attitude when shopping, I highly suggest that they order on online stores. I think a smart shopper nowadays, who doesn't have the time to go to the mall, orders their goods online (except for groceries). While surfing on the net, I suggested to a friend that he should buy this university stripes tie with bunny skulls.



Call me frantic but I think it's cute. I would certainly wear it if I were a business student doing class presentations (the hip student) or when i become a dad (the hip dad). Also, it makes a dad the coolest guy in the office if he wears that!

However, If you knew that your older sister and your younger are also buying a tie for your dad, I wouldn't risk my dad looking like a tie store in the office or being pushed around on who's tie to wear the day after Father's Day. If the choice could be anything other than tie, exploring an inner creativity and make homemade gifts to give to a dad is one good idea. The selection range is more diverse than ever: you can compose a song, write a heartfelt card, or paint a picture of your dad. It's your call. I think it would be the sweetest if you'd make an essay to your dad and tell him what is the best advice he gave to you. In that way, it makes a dad not only feel contented and reassured that he is doing a good job, but he would be able to know that he was successful in raising you as his kid. I would be the happiest man if I know I raised my kids well.





There is a catch in all these gift-giving season. It is not just Father's Day. No. All season that requires gift giving should have a big consideration in this highly important matter of trash and environment. Any buyer should be mindful of everything and anything he/she buys. Even if I am not a hardcore environmentalist, being green isn't just a fad but because being green is urgent. We can talk about that some other time. If you're worried that what you're going to buy may hurt the environment, try looking up these
12 green gifts dad will love
. It will not only make your dad happy but also you don't hurt the environment. Ties can also be made of organic materials (see picture below), and they can be so chic yet so environment-friendly.



The very essence of Father's Day is celebrating the story of daddyhood. It is you. You are the story of your dad, in his presence or absence, you remain to be the successor of the memories of what it takes to be a dad.

Now, if the tie I bought could just look for its owner.

-----



Happy Father's Day to the condomless. The moral/joke: "You wouldn't want a child as stubborn as you." You can buy condoms just like this chinese condom with David Beckham semi-naked. You'd feel humping like a soccer superstar!



Check out their additional Brand Flavors!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Summer is finally here!

Temperatures surely starts rising especially when it's summer. Hmmm...

this is yo[u]

Sign by Dealighted - Coupons and Deals

Sign by Dealighted - Coupons and Deals