The totally off-topic thread

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Right next to their Skinny Jeans from 20 years ago? :rolleyes:

You must remember to keep taking your memory pills. Skin tight jeans started up around 1983/4 in Australia (30 years ago...)and as workers at Luna Park we so enjoyed seeing those people who couldn't get out of some of the rides due to the pain caused by their jeans. The embarrassment of having to ask the attendants for help was balanced against trying to remain inconspicuous and the fear of a second go on the ride.

The worst (for the wearers) though was on the rotor. When the floor dropped away and if a hot/humid night the seams would often catch on the wooden sides and leave them hanging as the rotor slowed down. The shrieks that emerged, as their weight suddenly overcame the friction and they dropped, would often see people leave the queue for the next ride.
 
Way way earlier than the '80's.

Ok, pay that one.

I didn't realise you were that old...

[h=3]The early 19th century[/h] Regency era Dandy wearing tailcoat and tight fitting pantaloons


Tight fitting trousers were fashionable from 1805 until 1850, being descended from the loose work trousers worn as a political statement by Sans-Culottes during the French Revolution.[SUP][5][/SUP] These "pantaloons," popularised by Regency era Englishmen like Beau Brummel, were worn high on the waist and tailored to accentuate the leg like the breeches previously fashionable among the upper class.[SUP][6][/SUP] Pantaloons were tied (or buttoned) around the ankle and commonly put into boots.
[h=3]Decline 1890-1940[/h] Pants, which had come to mean tight-fitting trousers, but now just a synonym, fitted more loosely from the 1840s onwards as mass-production replaced tailoring. Beginning in the Edwardian era and continuing into the 1920s, baggy "Oxford" or "collegiate" trousers and plus fours were fashionable among the younger generation. As the name suggests, Oxford bags originated at the UK's elite universities, where young upper class men pursued an active, sports-centred lifestyle.[SUP][7][/SUP]
[h=3]The 1950s[/h] Elvis Presley wearing drainpipe jeans. In the 1950s, the waist was higher than on modern skinny jeans


Drainpipe trousers re-emerged in the 1950s, with popular stars such as the singing cowboy Roy Rogers, Lone Ranger, Cisco Kid, Zorro and Gene Autry, actress Marilyn Monroe, and Sandra Dee wearing their pants very slim to the ankle. Tapered jeans became most notable with country music stars and with the birth of rock and roll in the 1950s, when Elvis Presley donned slim-fitting jeans and shocked the country. Drainpipe jeans and rock 'n' roll were inextricably linked to create the "bad boy" image that remains today.
[h=3]The 1960s[/h] In the early 1960s, they were worn by numerous rock bands and musicians, including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan. Fashion icon Audrey Hepburn also raised the popularity of drainpipe jeans. Slim fitting pants and jeans where essentially worn not just by people who where associated with the Mods or Rockers but also ordinary people. The trend lasted until the end of the 1960s when Hippie Culture gave rise to flared pants and bell bottom jeans.
[h=3]The 1970s[/h] In the early 1970s, glam rock and rockabilly bands reviving the Teddy Boy look popularised drainpipe jeans in contrast to the flared trousers worn by hippies. Red tartan drainpipe jeans (as they were then called) were popular in the punk subculture of the late 1970s, worn by many bands and scene leaders such as Ramones, The Clash and Sex Pistols.
[h=3]The 1980s[/h] 80s glam metal band Poison wearing stonewashed drainpipe jeans


Skin-tight acid-washed jeans were also very popular in the 1980s with most heavy metal bands, and in particular those in the thrash metal scene, such as Anthrax, Megadeth, Metallica and Slayer. This was the trend for those who did not wear spandex, which was popular with the dominant heavy metal scene at the time. They were often worn with white high-top sneakers or basketball shoes like Converse. By the late 1980s, drainpipe pants were largely superseded by straight leg jeans like Levi 501s, but remained popular among fans of hard rock until the 1990s.
[h=3]The 1990s[/h] By the early 1990s, many glam metal bands such as Poison, Mötley Crüe, Kiss, Bon Jovi, and Slaughter, ditched the spandex and wore the form fitted jeans. Tight fitting jeans were also worn by pop stars like Michael Jackson and Freddie Mercury. However, with the rise of grunge and hip-hop music in the early 1990s and the post thrash movement, drainpipe jeans quickly went out of fashion in favor of baggy carpenter jeans, as worn by hip-hop/rap acts such as Kris Kross, Another Bad Creation, Snoop Dogg and other rap artists.
[h=3]2000s[/h] Scene kids wearing "skinny jeans"


The 2000s saw the continued rejection of slim-fitting pants and jeans throughout the early and middle years in mainstream fashion. However, in 2005, fitted pants were reintroduced to the mainstream market for women. This new pant style was called "skinny jeans". During its first year, skinny jeans were only sold online, and they were not available in stores. Initially, it was not well received by the public, though there were some early adapters. It would not be until 2006 that skinny jeans would gain more steam in fashion world, and by this time skinny jeans were being sold at shopping malls.[SUP][8][/SUP] Throughout 2007[SUP][9][/SUP] skinny jeans received more mainstream exposure as fashion trends started moving away from the bell bottoms and baggy pants which had been dominant for the past 10 years.[SUP][10][/SUP] Men's skinny jeans were introduced in 2008 and became the norm by 2009.[SUP][11][/SUP][SUP][12][/SUP]
 
Wasn't the fashion bootleg jeans 20 years ago? Get your theories right!

You must remember to keep taking your memory pills. Skin tight jeans started up around 1983/4 in Australia (30 years ago...)and as workers at Luna Park we so enjoyed seeing those people who couldn't get out of some of the rides due to the pain caused by their jeans. The embarrassment of having to ask the attendants for help was balanced against trying to remain inconspicuous and the fear of a second go on the ride.

The worst (for the wearers) though was on the rotor. When the floor dropped away and if a hot/humid night the seams would often catch on the wooden sides and leave them hanging as the rotor slowed down. The shrieks that emerged, as their weight suddenly overcame the friction and they dropped, would often see people leave the queue for the next ride.

I am aware of the the style called the "skinny jeans", however plenty of women generally refer to their best figure fitting jeans as their skinny for when they are at a healthy weight. Please refer to exhibit A and exhibit B below, as plenty of women tend to hoard clothing, footwear, accessorises etc for a long time.

So do mine from 20 years ago.

My skinny jeans from ten years ago still fit perfectly, thanks ;)

As as for shoes, best not to ask....
 
I am aware of the the style called the "skinny jeans", however plenty of women generally refer to their best figure fitting jeans as their skinny for when they are at a healthy weight. Please refer to exhibit A and exhibit B below, as plenty of women tend to hoard clothing, footwear, accessorises etc for a long time.

I have been reliably informed (that's what she told me) that it is not hoarding but it is long term fashion contingency planning combined with strategic financial planning.
 
Just watched "The Code" from last Sunday, so far so good, but it's a tad annoying to see errors creep in, when Ned hops into a taxi to go to the airport it has ordinary ACT plates and not specific Taxi plates.........

Just had a look at imdb and it shows Lucy Lawless as being in two episodes, can't wait!
 
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I am aware of the the style called the "skinny jeans", however plenty of women generally refer to their best figure fitting jeans as their skinny for when they are at a healthy weight. Please refer to exhibit A and exhibit B below, as plenty of women tend to hoard clothing, footwear, accessorises etc for a long time.
Oh I meant actual skinny jeans, as in the style. Though they do make a good weight test too.
 
Oh I meant actual skinny jeans, as in the style. Though they do make a good weight test too.

+1
To add to the discussion I also have a long fitted formal dress from TopShop that I wore twenty years ago which fits the same purpose, although unlike the jeans I could actually get away in a fashion sense with wearing it now :)
 
+1
To add to the discussion I also have a long fitted formal dress from TopShop that I wore twenty years ago which fits the same purpose, although unlike the jeans I could actually get away in a fashion sense with wearing it now :)

+3

Venus versus Mars.

You see. Men thinking what women are thinking isn't always right.

Hmmm, that'd be a good subject for a movie. ;)
 
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+3

Venus versus Mars.

You see. Men thinking what women are thinking isn't always right.

Hmmm, that'd be a good subject for a movie. ;)

And women thinking what men are thinking would also be a good movie... Oh wait, it's already been done :mrgreen:
 
Not sure whether to feel sorry for the bloke, either because that's a rough call or the bureaucracy he'll have to go through to clear it up.

There would be almost zero bureaucracy. Simply complete the dispute part of the form to say they can prove the car was not being driven by anyone at the time. Return the form.
 
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