'It's a lot harder than you might think to alert someone to the fact that their testicles are visible without causing offence or embarrassment'
As a man with two small kids, my social life largely revolves around lying on the sofa watching Location, Location, Location, so I am more in the market for loungewear (the comfortable stuff you wear when you have no intention of leaving the house) than most. So I don't mean to be abstruse when I say that when I saw the latest development in that area of menswear, my immediate thought was of my old college roommate's testicles. I saw them only once, one fateful morning in 1992. He was breakfasting seated on the sofa, clad in a dressing gown that was open to reveal his night attire of T-shirt and boxer shorts. As we talked, I noticed that his testicles had slipped their moorings. It's a lot harder than you might think to alert someone to the fact that their testicles are visible without causing offence or embarrassment. I couldn't think of anything. So we just sat there – me, him and his scrotum – until I fled the room.
I felt his baggy boxer shorts were to blame, which brings us to the latest development in menswear: the large boxer short, which at least one menswear website is boosting as suitable attire for the sofa-bound. I can see the comfort factor. I can see the bold statement of intent: "I'm going nowhere, and to prove it I shall wear a large pair of boxer shorts." But I can also see my testicles slipping their moorings on a regular basis, inflicting unnecessary trauma on my family. So, for that reason, and in every sense of the phrase: I'm out.
• Alexis wears boxers, £27, by HOM, from Selfridges.
Shirt £160, by Maison Martin Margiela from Liberty.
Jeans Alexis's own.
Shoes £165, by Russell & Bromley.
Alexis Petridis: The problem with large boxer shorts | Men's fashion | Life and style | The Guardian
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