Transcript for the Piece Audio version of Gay Fashion is the New Straight Fashion

Gay Fashion is the New Straight Fashion
Mark Anthony Waters,Youth Radio

SCRIPT:
What’s the new what? I say, gay fashion is the new straight fashion… in the hood, that is. And that’s what makes it new.

In ghetto neighborhoods, male fashion has always been about blending in. I know you’ve seen the look before: white T’s, blue jeans, and Nikes. Keak Da Sneak even recorded an anthem dedicated to the boring uniform of the street…

MUSIC: Bring up Keak Da Sneak’s White T’s, Blue Jeans, and Nikes…roll under

I wouldn’t be caught dead wearing the white T look. I’m all about big shiny sunglasses, sparkling necklaces, tight legged jeans…and this cute shirt I spotted at one of my favorite stories: DD’s Discounts.

AMBI: hangers skidding on the rack.
TAPE: Look at this! Oh my gosh, I’ve been looking for this shirt forever… (more ambi)

The straight boys who used to whisper about me on the bus haven’t discovered DD’s yet, but they are jacking my style. It all started when artists like Kanye West, Pherrell, and Cam’ron showed up on the TV screen, suited and booted in outfits I would have picked out in middle school. Now my uber-macho nephew, AR, is raiding my closet.

AR: Tell you the truth, unc, you got swag.

AR loves that word swag.

AR: Swag is how you dress, it’s how you make people compliment you on everything you do, even how you walk, that’s swag.

I’m so proud AR doesn’t look like every other fashion reject in a white t-shirt. But standing outside my closet at home, I ask AR if he thinks my favorite new shirt is “swagalicious” (his word, not mine). It’s got a rainbow pattern and says, “I will not apologize.”

AR: (Sigh). I mean… no disrespect to the homos, but that’s not my swag.

No disrespect taken, cause I’ll always dress better than he does. But then I ask AR if he’d at least compliment a gay boy on a nice pair of jeans.

AR: If they do got something nice on, I will respect that, and I will let em know that. I like the jeans.

Hearing that comforts me. But Duke University Professor Mark Anthony Neal, who writes about gender and race, isn’t so optimistic. He says straight boys might push the boundaries in terms of fashion…

Prof Neal: But might not push those boundaries in terms of the cultures and life styles that some of those clothing styles come from. So they can dress gay in their minds, but they might not want to have friendships with gay men.

SONG: “What is love? Baby don’t hurt me, don’t hurt me, no more…what is love… ”

They don’t have to be friends with me… They just better realize they wanna look like me. And if ghetto fashion has always been about looking tough, there is nothing tougher than being who you are, without apologizing.

© 2008 Youth Radio, Oakland, CA.

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