You could spend summer sweating through your jeans, spending the equivalent of a car payment on linen pants, or digging through military surplus bins that smell like mothballs for the perfect fatigues. Or, you can just spend $50 on a pair of Uniqlo's wide leg cargos. For this week's Esquire Endorsement, our writer argues for these as the pants of the summer: comfortable like joggers, durable like workwear; cargo pockets for a road drink; more comfortable, and breathable, than anything slim or tightly tapered. I've heard, and made, my fair share of theses about pants. This is as ironclad a pants argument as I've ever come across. –Luke Guillory, commerce editor Plus: |
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Uniqlo's wide leg silhouette is all you need for outdoor adventures, city heat, and everything in between.
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While there is no shortage of big pants we can wear to the office, or for date nights, more chill hangs call for another option entirely. What's a big pant that offers the comfort of joggers and the durability of workwear? What's a big pant that can weather a storm, or cheap beer at a ball game and not fuss over it? More importantly, what's a big pant that can look good dressed down (with, say, sleeveless tees or acid-washed hoodies) but can get classy with a nice sweater? The answer to all these questions is the Uniqlo Wide Cargo. They're the bottom half of what I'm calling the Hanging with the Dudes uniform. |
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In 2010, at the age of eighty, Fenn had self-published The Thrill of the Chase: A Memoir. In the book, he revealed that he had buried a bronze treasure chest loaded full of gold coins and nuggets, emeralds, diamonds, rubies, jade carvings, sapphires, and other precious objects. The value was estimated by others as between $1 million and $3 million, or more. (Fenn himself always refused to name numbers, maintaining that the price of gold fluctuates.) Hints about where the treasure was hidden were woven through the book, according to Fenn, and it included a poem that he said contained nine specific clues about the location of the chest. It was "in the mountains somewhere north of Santa Fe," he wrote. Right there for the taking, if you could just crack the code. |
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I wish this had been the case in 2002, and in 1964, for all that, but, finally, thank God, a president has launched a unilateral war of choice and his popularity has not risen. In fact, it's tanking as thoroughly as the rest of his numbers have. If this is the end of presidents making war in places because their policies are unpopular at home, if this emboldens a timid Congress to take back at least some of its war powers, then it may be the best development of all to come out of this Iran mess. CNN popped some numbers on Tuesday, and it looks like the nation is not exactly rallying around its great peacemaker. |
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