SOCIETY

Bum Rap

The latest and perhaps most disturbing evolution of clothing with suggestive phrases on the backside, and what schools are doing about it.

Eric Gay / AP (left); Moodboard-Corbis
Left: One of the inmate-made prison jumpsuits that will be offered to students in Gonzales, Texas, if they violate the school district's dress code. Right: Shorts that would merit jumpsuiting, according to the code.
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

SPONSORED BY
 

Remember a few years ago, when everyone got upset because teens were sporting shorts and sweatpants with the word JUICY (or worse) across their backsides? And remember how when you were a kid, you could get a necklace or a tiny license plate with your name on it at the mall? Well, those two fabulous ideas have converged to become the oh-so-highbrow Boyfriend Bum Lettered Shorts (not the official name). This fashion breakthrough allows young women to walk around with phrases like MIKE'S ASS or TIM'S ASS written on their bums. Classy, no?

A conscientious parent might worry that young girls will think it's OK for some guy named Tim to own a part of their bodies and to refer to it with a word usually preceded by the phrase "a piece of." It's not likely that the folks who make clothing with words on the bum consider such issues, of course, but if you're über-optimistic, you might give them the benefit of the doubt and assume that they're making a kind of postfeminist effort to turn sexism on its, uh, rear.

The strip of seat-of-the-pants real estate turns out to be pretty valuable. In April, Juicy Couture, the Liz Claiborne-owned company that first put the word JUICY on the posterior, filed suit in a Manhattan court against Victoria's Secret, claiming the lingerie purveyor had stolen their packaging strategies and their classic butt-writing idea and used it in their PINK line of clothing. Juicy has asked that all the offending clothes be destroyed and wants triple damages—three times the profits Victoria's Secret made through its alleged idea-pilfering. In a statement, Juicy called its velour sweats with Victorian lettering on the backside a "collegiate preppy look." (Are you listening, Yale?)

Collegiate or not, the concept of bum lettering has spread across university campuses. Even at Smith College, the alma mater of feminist icon Betty Friedan, SMITH adorns the backsides of some of the brightest women in America. Of course, for those who attend a school with a two-word name, there's a shallower concern than abandoning the principles of feminism. After all, nothing is more upsetting than finding that after a few months of dorm food, your BRYN is now a foot away from your MAWR.

Mothers of college girls may have already given up the fight against the branding of their daughters' bottoms (that is, if they're not branded themselves), but there's hope for concerned parents of middle- and high-school kids. Fall is here, and schools across the country have been rolling out an increasingly strict array of dress codes. Districts are adopting bans on shorts and sweatpants with phrases on the bum, as well as a whole range of other fashion statements.

Much of what's forbidden is old hat: no droopy pants, no visible thongs, no obscenity. But this year, schools in North Carolina's Catawba County are banning anything with a logo or lettering, even if doesn't sound dirty. Yes, that includes (gasp!) Abercrombie and Fitch. Other schools found it easier to list what is allowed than what isn't. The Detroit school system's dress code forbids shirts in anything but five colors … if you count white and black as colors: "All students shall wear white, blue, black, yellow or pink."

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
NEWSWEEK's 20/10
NEWSWEEK's 20/10

Our decade-in-review project recalls the highs and lows of the last 10 years.

Obama's Promises
Obama's Promises

Is the new president fulfilling his campaign pledges? Or falling short?

The Decade in 7 Minutes
The Decade in 7 Minutes

Video: A fast-paced review of the best and worst moments. Don't blink.

Accidental Celebrities
Accidental Celebrities

From Levi Johnston to Elian Gonzalez, these people never expected to be in the spotlight.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: mfenwick @ 11/30/2008 2:59:53 PM

    School dress codes are aimed at girls, not boys. That's because girls are very sexual at the junior high and high school levels. They post videos of themselves on YouTube and make private porn movies for their boyfriends. So it should not come as any surprise that girls use words on their clothing to draw attention to certain body parts that they are proud of and want guys to notice. Let them be sexual, because they are.

  • Posted By: Kolibri @ 11/11/2008 12:01:23 PM

    Excuse me, but kids do not become ugly or stupid just because they don't follow the style! Not meaning to brag, but I received national recognition by Duke University for my score on the ACT--and I wouldn't wear shorts like these if you paid me millions of dollars. I mean it. All of you conformists need to grow up. You aren't the only people, your views aren't the only views, and your style isn't the only style. There are others, such as myself, who HATE these ugly rags and just want to act like civilized, mature human beings. GET USED TO IT!!

  • Posted By: Kolibri @ 11/11/2008 11:54:42 AM

    Yes, it's stupid that Detroit outlawed certain colors and hair lengths, but please control your language. (It would also be nice if you worked on your grammar and spelling, as you are making yourself appear very uneducated.)
    Look, I'm a kid too and I think you're being one heck of an idiot. These clothes are inappropriate! They show too much!
    I have so much trouble finding decent clothes because I don't want to wear the translucent, sleeveless junk with which most department stores stuff their shelves. I don't want to walk around looking like I'm wearing pajamas (and revealing, suggestive pajamas at that). Not only are these clothing companies encouraging inappropriate dress, they are also making it hard for extreme nonconformists such as myself to find anything to wear!
    It's time for two things to happen: The "preppy" kids who want to be "cool" need to be restrained, and the nonconformists need to be given a fair shot at shopping. We (by "we" I mean teens like me) might not like Hannah Montana, High School Musical, or other popular things, but that doesn't--or at least it shouldn't--keep us from getting something that WE like.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse