Sagging Pants, Negative Messages

(Malingering)

By Shane Miller

The Bronx Journal Staff Writer

As you walk down the street with your family or by yourself, I’m sure the last thing you want to see is the underwear of another person. Even when low-rise jeans were trending years ago, there were complaints about women showing their thongs. The low-rise jeans trend has faded with many other fashion trends for women over the years, but for many men and young boys, the sagging pants trend is here to stay.

Seeing someone sagging their pants was not always such a big issue for people. In 1992 Calvin Klein had a major underwear advertisement with Mark Wahlberg. The commercial featured Mark Wahlberg wearing Calvin Klein boxer briefs and sagging his pants low enough for the famous logo to show. After that advertising campaign, Calvin Klein’s underwear sales skyrocketed. Women loved the muscular Wahlberg and men wanted to show off their Calvin Kleins.

The ‘90s were the dawn of the baggy jean and the Calvin Klein ad was the mainstream media’s tacit approval of sag in your pants. It has been reported that the saggy pants trend originated in prisons. In an article titled “Sag Harbored” the author wrote, “Sagging pants became the behind-the-bars thing, thanks to ill-fitting prison-issue garb: some of those incarcerated were provided with clothing a few sizes too large. That oversizing, coupled with the lack of belts in the big house, led to a great number of jailbirds whose pants were falling off their arses.”

Now it is 2012 and the sentiments about showing your underwear are nothing like they were during the early 90s. In recent years it seems like the sagging pants trend has been amplified. Young men have been sagging their pants way lower than Mark Wahlberg in those infamous commercials. In some cases men and young men alike have been known to sag their pants to their knees.

Mainstream media condemn the fashion trend, and it even became a major topic on the popular show “American Idol.” During one of the auditions, “General” Larry Platt became famous for his song “Pants on the Ground.” The content of the song included the line, “You looking like a fool with your pants on the ground.” Although “American Idol” is an entertainment show, Platt touched on a serious issue that affects men, particularly men of color.

(csc4u)

When a person of color chooses to sag his pants he inadvertently represents all people of color. Taj Madhoo is a 21-year-old college student who has been affected by the negative connotations associated with sagging pants. Madhoo said, “I remember going to a post office and the associate behind the window telling me I wouldn’t walk like that if I pulled my pants up. But in reality, I had on sweatpants that were tied very tight and were on my waist.” The situation Madhoo describes shows that some people assume that just because you are a young man of color, you must be sagging your pants. Madhoo continued by saying, “I don’t sag my pants because I don’t think it looks good and when I see people doing it, I feel they don’t care about their appearance and what they represent.”

Sagging pants may not look good, but what they represent to different people is the biggest factor. When asked about what she thinks of when seeing sagging pants, Lorna Neil said, “When I see people sagging their pants, they honestly look like criminals to me, like they are up to no good.” Neil didn’t say why she thinks that when she sees it, but maybe it is in some relation to the prison origin of sagging pants.

(Malingering)

Appearance is not the only issue with sagging pants. The site hiphopandpolitics.com did a study and published the results in an article titled, “Wearing saggy pants (is) linked to erectile dysfunction & other health issues.” The article details how walking consistently with sagging pants can lead to hip issues and problems with your back. The author continues, “Dr. Mark Oliver Mansbach explains that the continuous wearing of sagging pants severely impacts sexual performance.” With these studies released, the question arises of whether men who sag their pants will tone it done in hopes of avoiding health issues.

Hip hop is one of the main reasons that sagging pants have not yet gone out of style. It is a style celebrated by several artists and is a statement of rebellion. The fact that some artists sag their pants is proudly championed in their music. Kanye West, Jay-Z, Snoop Dogg, and Lil Wayne are all important figures in hip hop culture and, at some point, have all sagged their pants. When impressionable young men see these images of the men they idolize, they think it is cool to do, and they overlook all of the negative reactions associated with it.

Shawn Thomas is a 17-year-old high school student who sags his pants. He says, “It shouldn’t matter to people how I want to wear my pants, the key word in that being MY. I don’t tell older people I don’t like how they wear their clothes, so they shouldn’t say anything about how I wear mines.” Thomas makes a good point because you may not like the way someone looks, but that doesn’t give you the right to say anything about it.

Regardless of your personal view on the sagging pants trend, appearance is often first way your present yourself to others. If someone chooses to wear their pants so low, they are making a strong statement, and unfortunately, that statement is a negative one in mainstream culture.

7 Responses to Sagging Pants, Negative Messages

  1. Blue June 25, 2013 at 1:35 am

    The problem with rebellion without direction leads to statements made by misguided people, whom also acts in a manner that can lead to empowering the target of the so-called rebellion and their own demise. I haven’t read this journal report saying that this leads to erectile dysfunction and other physical health issues. What I see is young men, whether intelligent or not, walking like they’re on a “perpetual chain gang” walking from place to place with shackles on. Look at their walking gate, it looks like they have shackles around their waist, wrists and ankles. Terrible example of the human condition, especially with our history of being in chains at auction, then forced to walk miles unmentionable.!!!

    Reply
  2. R. Hyatt June 25, 2013 at 11:16 pm

    Regardless, showing of undergarments, is still indecency in this society. There are laws and ordinances in every community in this Great Nation that forbid indecency, whether they are enforced or not. Notice that the kid of 17 who gives his opinion is still just a kid. This is his opinion, not his right. He, like all others, have the right to follow the laws of the land or face the penalties of not following them. Ultimately, Those who wear their “pants on the ground” look ridiculous.

    Reply
  3. Isham(Ike) Alexander August 23, 2013 at 6:49 pm

    As a retired sp. educator/pro-percussionist I find it appalling for anyone to “Sagg”.

    Please view “Ike Alexander Pull Em Up” on youtube where my latest jingle can be heard concerning this issue.

    Reply
  4. M. Boyce September 25, 2013 at 7:42 am

    I am white. I sag my pants. I am comfortable with the way they sit. They feel comfortable to me. By no means is my ass hanging out. Not only are my pants sagged when I wear them, my shirt comfortably covers my “undergarments.”

    There is a sad level of decency in this country, and its too bad people always jump the gun and point fingers when they have nothing better to do with their time.

    I am also educated, but by no means do that make me a “good” person. I am a “good” person, but my clothing, and how I choose to wear it, has absolutely no relation to one another.

    Reply
  5. Cassy November 2, 2013 at 3:34 am

    It should be falling pants not sagging pants to describe this rediculous trend. A trend that speaks volumes to how negative and rebellious the scene of this world is developing. Boundaries have always been pushed in fashion trends and this one is no different. Rather its young men showing their underpants, or young women, it all starts first from the mainstream media in videos or commercials and fashion magazines even at award shows. The trend setters are using the most provocative and sexually based methods to influence or market because bottom line…it works. Those trends are picked up and glorified by those who are most impressionable or easily influenced., i.e. fans, teenagers. The end result is a generation full of followers completely unaware of where or why the stlye of dress originated. All of us are guilty of being influenced to some degree which affects our choices in how we dress but the problem is when that choice has not only crossed the lines of indecency and respect but completely erased it! Underwear are just that, underwear—to be worn under clothing not as clothing. There is nothing good about this trend and as the writer emphasizes in the above article it truly does send a negative message of the person wearing it.

    Reply
  6. Kevin McSherry November 28, 2015 at 9:20 pm

    Come on! No one here is running around naked . I’m sure there are places in our societies where much more “exposure” is evident. Although this trend may have serious implications.; at this point leave it be! Let’s solve some bigger problems! KMcS

    Reply
  7. Isham(Ike) Alexander October 12, 2021 at 1:28 am

    Isham(Ike) Alexander
    September 11, 2021

    It’s been roughly eight Years since I wrote a comment about sagging on this sight, and yet, sagging still prevails!
    I am still continuing to discourage this form of dress.
    Once again, Please review my jingle (Ike Alexander) “PULL EM UP”, still available on YouTube under my name, as well as my Ike Alexander “INTERVIEW”, also available on YouTube.

    Reply

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