4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 24 September 2024
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
A style renaissance that changed how many men dress – mostly for the better – has congealed into a sea of sameness, at least in the eyes of a growing number of fashion critics and influencers. Too many interchangeable brands take the same approach, blending tailoring with casualwear in neutral-toned collections that are stylish but often fail to inspire. The look is often derided as a menswear “starter pack,” but remains popular with consumers.
This week on The Debrief, Brian Baskin sits down with correspondents Malique Morris and Lei Takanashi to discuss why this “starter pack” approach works for the industry - but at the cost of long-term brand building and customer loyalty. Additionally, they probe what brands must do to recapture consumers' imagination.
“Any brand can make a good product, but what makes a brand good, especially a good menswear brand, is having a great story that's worth telling,” says Takanashi.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular B.OF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. |
0:16.1 | I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. And today we're going to be talking about menswear. It is old news by now to say |
0:22.7 | that the category's been in something of a renaissance. I can't tell you how many times I've seen the word |
0:27.6 | Gorpcor, a word that barely existed three years ago, appear in our stories. Actually, I counted. |
0:33.7 | Last year alone, we had six stories where I believe Gork Cori was in the headline, so there's that. |
0:38.7 | But it's safe to say we're getting to the point in every trend cycle where once cutting-edge |
0:42.8 | concepts have gone mainstream or close to it, and maybe people are getting a little tired of them. |
0:48.1 | What felt revolutionary a couple years ago feels safe and even boring now. |
0:52.4 | And inevitably, speculation turns to what's next. On that note, |
0:56.5 | with me today are two of our correspondents, Malik Morris and Lay Takanashi, who have been covering |
1:01.4 | every twist and turn in the menswear trend cycle. Hello, Malik, and hello, Lay. Welcome to the |
1:06.6 | debrief podcast. Hi. Thank you so much for having us. This is wonderful. I'm so excited. |
1:12.2 | It's a pleasure to be here, Brian. Thank you. Let's start with the good. When you two think of the |
1:16.9 | brands and campaigns that really push brownries and define the terms for the menswear boom, |
1:22.8 | what comes to mind? Well, for me, I would say, like, Virgil Ablo as men's creative director, Louis Vuitton, |
1:29.3 | that really felt like a watershed moment, sort of the connection he had to music and popular |
1:34.9 | culture, more broadly, you know, when he was appointed at LV in 2018. It really influenced that |
1:40.5 | brand's aesthetic. It was, like, it was vibrant and it wasn't just like |
1:45.4 | hoodies and sneakers. You know, he also played with proportions and suiting, you know, and he was |
1:50.1 | also doing similar work at his brand off white. And this wasn't sort of happening in a vacuum |
1:55.5 | either. I don't know if it's sort of fair to say that Virgil influenced other designers during this time, |
2:01.7 | but he was certainly like in really good company with other creatives at Big Houses. |
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