Twitter Users Roast WSJ For Saying Sweatpants Shouldn't Be Worn For Working From Home
The Wall Street Journal has officially gone too far: In a piece published on Tuesday, the newspaper implored people who work remotely (“long the territory of slobby creatives”) to “upgrade” their looks and spend thousands of dollars on clothing people will see only via webcam.
And like me, Twitter did not like it.
The tweet for the piece flat-out says, “No, you shouldn’t be wearing sweatpants to work — even when you work from home.” Which is, frankly, the wrong take, because the athleisure movement is still thriving, as far as I’m concerned.
No, you shouldn't be wearing sweatpants to work—even when you work from home https://t.co/hgL0g3xJMJ
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) November 21, 2018
“It’s been 17 years since I’ve regularly reported to an office, and since then many of the rules about how we work, and how we dress for it, have changed,” Christine Lennon writes in the piece.
“Here in Los Angeles, my work appointments bleed into my personal time as I drive around town, so I need outfits that function for both. To stay focused and on task for the professional parts, I often err on the dressy side,” she continues.
The piece then shills a “new WFH wardrobe” that features a $3,100 handbag and $645 loafers.
First of all, Christine: No. In no stretch of the imagination do I carry a $3,100 handbag, unless some magic fairy dropped down and left one on my lap. Even then, I’d probably be skeptical and ask, “Will I be taxed on this?”
Additionally, if I’m Skyping into a meeting, no one’s looking at my feet. My DSW loafers are just as chic and comfortable for my errands around town, thank you very much.
The article gets only more absurd and unhinged from there and suggests readers rock $4,160 earrings. That’s a down payment on a Ford Focus, Christine. What sugar daddy did I dredge up from SeekingArrangement.com to pay for those so I could look cute and Wall Street Journal–approved for my “stressful Skype session”?
To preserve my own sanity and check in on how bougie my colleagues are dressing these days when they work from home, I asked a few of them what they were wearing while they produced the news. One told me, “I am wearing jeans and a flannel shirt and mismatched socks, wet hair, no makeup.” She specified the jeans were Gap and the flannel was Old Navy.
Another told me, “I literally have on a tank top, sweater, underwear and one compression sock because I hurt my leg.”
The Journal piece is clearly catering to a very specific group of humans, but it didn’t get just my blood boiling. Twitter users from all over were extremely irritated as well:
if a woman goes to work and nobody sees her, will her clothing choices still be shamed in a major newspaper?
— yule lad (@peterdroberts) November 21, 2018
i'm wearing sweatpants right now FUCKING FIGHT ME https://t.co/rJOdeS1bwe
— Anne T. Donahue (@annetdonahue) November 21, 2018
Get out of my apartment. https://t.co/gPd0pqw6hW
— Alex Segura (@alex_segura) November 21, 2018
actually this is correct bc you shouldn't even be wearing pants at all if you're working from home! thanks WSJ https://t.co/uhwvDqHNa5
— Samantha Tomaszewski (@managewski) November 21, 2018
this article is the author's cry for help https://t.co/9qKIuWhMAr
— Jason Linkins (@dceiver) November 21, 2018
I'd rather wear sweatpants than whatever Midwest Casual Friday, mid-'60s nightmare you're pushing in your header image here. https://t.co/Cfck0JB4Hs
— Alisha Grauso (@AlishaGrauso) November 21, 2018
I can say with 100% certainty that no one on planet earth is taking fashion advice from the WALL STREET JOURNAL. Now show us a photo of what the editorial floor is wearing. Let us see these fashion authorities. I demand transparency. https://t.co/qhm1WJXX8v
— Diana Tourjée (@DianaTourjee) November 21, 2018
One commenter on the piece had the answer to end all other answers:
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Rock on, William.
Also on HuffPost
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2. Giorgio Armani
1. Oscar de la Renta
This article originally appeared on HuffPost.