danofarlington
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Reflecting more of the talk on another thread about hats we can't stand, it occurs to me that by the 1930s to 1960s, hats were so prevalent that they were an integral part of the costume of people in many occupations. On the negative side of that, actually they were used as tools of intimidation. Think:
1950s cops and fedoras
gangsters and fedoras
rural cops and Open Roads
Black Panthers and berets
drill sergeants and Montana peak hats
state troopers and the same
Nazis in Nazi helmets (yeah yeah yeah I know they're not fedoras but I'm just saying)
In all of these cases, if (in the movies) you saw a man coming up to you in a hat, you were in trouble. I think some of that intimidation factor carries over today. When at church once I wore my wide-brim Borsalino dress hat, a guy grabbed his coat as if going for his gun, which was humorous. Or, I went to the supermarket deli in my Open Road to get some cold cuts, and the counter guy says "what do you need, boss?" However, most of that mindset seems to have washed away in the intervening 50 years since hats were popular. Now they are mostly just hats. At that level I like them. But it probably motivates some of the pushback of people about wearing hats, which harks back to the times when hats were worn as part of serious business by serious people who took themselves seriously and yes, wanted to intimidate YOU. Happy it's mostly gone.
1950s cops and fedoras
gangsters and fedoras
rural cops and Open Roads
Black Panthers and berets
drill sergeants and Montana peak hats
state troopers and the same
Nazis in Nazi helmets (yeah yeah yeah I know they're not fedoras but I'm just saying)
In all of these cases, if (in the movies) you saw a man coming up to you in a hat, you were in trouble. I think some of that intimidation factor carries over today. When at church once I wore my wide-brim Borsalino dress hat, a guy grabbed his coat as if going for his gun, which was humorous. Or, I went to the supermarket deli in my Open Road to get some cold cuts, and the counter guy says "what do you need, boss?" However, most of that mindset seems to have washed away in the intervening 50 years since hats were popular. Now they are mostly just hats. At that level I like them. But it probably motivates some of the pushback of people about wearing hats, which harks back to the times when hats were worn as part of serious business by serious people who took themselves seriously and yes, wanted to intimidate YOU. Happy it's mostly gone.
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