Stop Trying So Hard
Image via etsy
Dear JIs,
Congratulations again on your initiation. You’re not the miserable little skid marks on the underwear of society that you were last semester, and that’s something to be proud of. We now have a whole new pledge class of skid marks that you get to help haze. Now, with those pleasantries out of the way, there’s a serious conversation we need to have about the way you dress. In short, if you tried any harder, you’d pull a muscle.
Dressing “fratty” is part of being in a fraternity. I get that. At the same time, there’s a difference between dressing fratty and dressing like a TFM stereotype jizzed out your wardrobe. Was your father too busy doing meth under a bridge while you were growing up to teach you common sense? Regardless, you all look like clowns, and you’re responsible for the direction our fraternity is headed in after I’m gone, so it’s time someone taught you a thing or two about taste.
First of all, you don’t need fifteen different logos on to prove that you really are in a fraternity. Pairing Southern Tide croakies with your Costa sunglasses, Southern Proper visor, Brooks Brothers oxford, and Polo chinos is going way, way, way overboard. “More is better,” is a great approach to alcohol consumption, but it doesn’t work with brands. I know you’re proud that you finally replaced your high school wardrobe of Hollister polos and cargo shorts with brands that are “totally a TFM, brah,” but give me a break. You look like a schizophrenic frat clown now. Stop.
Secondly, just because someone starts a company that makes Southern-style apparel doesn’t mean you need to immediately run out and buy eight of their shirts. Your new General Lee’s Old Cotton Over Under Proper Bourbon Marsh shirt is probably nice, but I really don’t care to hear about it. No one else has the same one for a reason. Trying to know about things before other people know about them is for hipsters, and I don’t associate with hipsters. If I had my way, every hipster in these great United States would be rounded up and shot in the street. I have to deal with enough of them as it is when I go downtown. Then again, those might be homeless people. I have a hard time telling the difference.
And enough with the bow ties. There are plenty of occasions where bow ties are completely appropriate, such as weddings and semi-formal. If you want to wear a bow tie to those, be my guest. In fact, I’ll probably have one on, too. I actually love bow ties. There’s just no reason for you to be wearing them to class and out to the bars on a Tuesday night. If I see one more try-hard walk into class with a pre-tied bow tie on, I’m going to find a nun and punch her right in the teeth. That’s how stupid you look. I’d rather go to hell than have to look at you.
Finally, as much as I love seersucker, you’ve got to resist the urge to get a seersucker version of everything imaginable, and you’ve got to wait until Easter to wear it. If you were still a pledge, I’d just take your seersucker croakies, your seersucker wallet, your seersucker watch band, and your new pocket-tee with a seersucker pocket and make you watch me while I burn them. Unfortunately, our officers say I’m not supposed to destroy the things you love anymore.
Oh hell, it’s my fifth year. What are they going to do, not let me come back next semester? I’m getting my lighter.
Don’t be something you’re not. I’m not a hat or sunglasses guy, so I don’t wear them.
12 years ago at 6:20 pmAgreed. Most guys have a huge boner for visors but unless I’m actually out on the course I’d rather wear a hat.
12 years ago at 6:36 pm^^Agree with not being something you’re not, pretending to act/ dress one way because of a website is pretty fucking homosexual
12 years ago at 6:46 pm^^, ^^^I like the cuts of your jib, good sirs.
12 years ago at 10:39 pm^^ concur
12 years ago at 12:47 pmSomebody needed to say it
12 years ago at 7:24 pmI’ve seen fraternities at my school let their pledges dress in pledge attire with bow ties, which is an utter disgrace.
12 years ago at 8:41 pmLet them, or force them? Is it the pledges or the fraternities that are try hards?
12 years ago at 11:54 amThey let them. I’d say some fraternities are try-hards, certainly not all of them.
12 years ago at 5:06 pmFucking finally, these JI’s need to hear this
12 years ago at 9:20 pmWhile in my experience the JIs do this a little at first, most of them learn on their own pretty quickly where the line of “too much” is. We really need to direct this to the one guy in our pledge class who is still doing it after two years. We all have one, and after this long of doing it he tries to claim that “it’s just who he is” and has nothing to do with the house or the Greek community (despite the fact that they’re all new clothes).
12 years ago at 9:34 pmColumn of the fucking year.
12 years ago at 10:37 pm^
12 years ago at 11:00 pm^ You realize theres a this button right?
12 years ago at 12:08 pmMy biggest pet peeve is that seersucker bullshit. We had JI’s showing up in seersucker shorts after Christmas break and I couldn’t help but want to set a match to that shit. “It’s fucking January, dipshit! Don’t you know anything?”
12 years ago at 11:02 pmThank you. It’s pretty obvious who is new to seersucker, most likely due to this website or some other try-hard bullshit, an who is not because they don’t know when it’s acceptable to wear the shit. Personally I think the only time you should wear your seersucker suit is on Easter or at a wedding.
12 years ago at 1:42 am^and carolina cup
12 years ago at 9:36 am“General Lee’s Old Cotton Over Under Proper Bourbon Marsh shirt,” it’s a TFM.
12 years ago at 11:32 pmI wear different colors and fabrics according to whatever season it is. Seersucker and linen for spring and summer, flannel and tattersalls during the fall and winter.
We are currently still in the winter. Dress accordingly.
12 years ago at 1:12 amEveryone who comments on the TFM Facebook page should have to read this.
12 years ago at 1:56 am