Boob Press In Bus Groping- Peperonity.com -

"We are not doing a 'what to wear to avoid harassment' story. Ever," says style editor Clara Wu. "That is victim-blaming disguised as service journalism. The problem isn't the bias-cut slip. It’s the hand that grabs."

However, Wu notes that fashion brands themselves have a responsibility to stop romanticizing predatory behavior. "For years, campaigns have used the 'candid backseat of a car' or 'cramped elevator' as a sexy trope. That seeps into the real-world behavior of people who think crowding is flirting." boob press in bus groping- peperonity.com

In the aftermath of the latest allegations (referencing a specific incident during Copenhagen Fashion Week last month, where a male photographer was escorted off a shuttle by police), the inevitable, toxic question has emerged on social media: "Should women on press buses dress more modestly?" "We are not doing a 'what to wear to avoid harassment' story

Let’s describe the scene. After a September show in Milan, the temperature is 85 degrees. A fashion editor is wearing a slip dress—silk, bias-cut, from a buzzy downtown label. A photo assistant is in a cropped jersey top and low-rise cargo pants, inspired by Miu Miu’s latest. A reviewer sports a liquid-leather maxi skirt. These are not invitations. They are professional uniforms suited to the climate and the calendar. The problem isn't the bias-cut slip

Fashion is about the politics of the body: who gets to reveal it, who gets to control it, and who gets to consume it. For three weeks every season, the press bus becomes a microcosm of that struggle.

So where does style content go from here? It moves from the runway to the regulation.