Michael Alden of The London Lounge knows how to accessorize.
Former San Francisco Mayor Willie L. Brown, Jr. in his early days in the California State Legislature.
The folks at Esquire’s style blog were kind enough to invite me and my friend Will Boehlke from A Suitable Wardrobe to dialogue about getting dressed and getting older. I’m 30, but my first child is on the way. Will’s in his 60s, but has been buying clothes made for him since he was a teenager.
The news hook for the piece was the President’s 50th birthday, and the editor asked if we had specific thoughts about his dress. This is what I wrote, though all but the last sentence ended up on Esquire’s cutting room floor.
When I was in high school, I worked in the Mayor’s Office in San Francisco. The Mayor, at the time, was Willie Brown, one of the country’s best-dressed politicians. Mayor Brown came to San Francisco from Texas as a laborer, worked his way through San Francisco State College (now University), and was the longest-serving speaker of the State Assembly. He was mayor for eight years and remains a powerful force in California politics, even as a private citizen.
Throughout it all, the Mayor cut a fine figure. He was certainly one of my sartorial idols as a teenager. We used to get calls and letters, though, and they often picked on the way he dressed. I remember the word “pimp” being bandied about a lot. He was often called “imperial.” I don’t think that even progressives in San Francisco were comfortable with the idea of a black guy not just being in power, but wearing his power outwardly. The fact that a man from humble roots, born into a segregated world, would choose to wear clothes that were the opposite of unassuming is still controversial in San Francisco today.
This is of course a problem for any politician, but I think for a black politician in America, it’s particularly fraught. President Obama has worked hard to cultivate an image as a cool, collected, responsible black guy. I think he actually is that guy, to a great extent, but I also think that every suit he puts on is an effort to reinforce that image. It’s a reaction to the reaction he’s come to expect from a smart black man in power. Hence the cool colors, the conservative, off-the-rack American suits and so on. Ronald Reagan could afford to be glamorous, and Obama cannot.
And yeah, some of his formal clothing choices have been awful.
Some weekend wisdom from The Fonz.

Glenn O’Brien on The Sound of Young America
Here’s a special treat for Put This On fans. I interviewed Glenn O’Brien, GQ’s Style Guy, about his new book “How To Be A Man,” for my public radio show The Sound of Young America. Since the interview is so PTO-appropriate, I thought I’d share it here first (and on the Put This On podcast feed in iTunes), before it airs on the radio.
Despite its title, the book isn’t another didactic how-to. It’s a collection of charming, funny essays about masculinity. It’s not a cliched masculinity, either. It’s a robust, full-spectrum masculinity that befits the author, who was a New Wave legend and a collaborator with Andy Warhol.
So: listen and enjoy! You’ll probably learn something. (By the way, if this happens to cut off, go ahead and grab the show in iTunes or by downloading directly from this link. Tumblr seems to have a bit of trouble with long audio.)
“If we’re created in the image of God, do you want to wear some Steelers jersey?” - Glenn O’Brien
Atlanta brothers Andre and Keith Churchwell looking brilliant on a summer evening, in a photo from A Suitable Wardrobe. Two of the world’s best-dressed men pulling off colored dinner jackets perfectly. The off-white dinner jacket is a summer staple - great for warm weather and less-serious black tie events. The relaxed elegance of the shawl lapel matches this tone perfectly. Light blue is a little tougher to pull off, a real sartorial power move, but Andre Churchwell couldn’t be pulling it off better.
And by the way: note Andre’s opera pumps, always the most elegant evening footwear choice. You can try and tell him he looks feminine if you want to. I’ll be too busy telling him he looks spectacular.
thanks to PTO
I’ve been bothering Roxy, telling her she should do a Bryan Ferry post on Nerd Boyfriend for months now. I think we can agree that she knocked it out of the park.
“Don’t be a casual fascist. A man needs to kick back in his own inimitable methodology. I always aim to overdress rather than underdress. It looks like I have someplace better to go later.”— Glenn O’Brien
Mandatory Andre Benjamin reblog policy in full effect.
White shawl dinner jacket? Check.
Mother of pearl shirt studs? Check.
Diamond point tie? Check.
Andre Benjamin hat? Check.
A++.
(Source: howtotalktogirlsatparties)




