Ok. So that made me wonder...
In my time as a Clochard of Paris I walked a lot of streets. Actually, all I did was sleeping, getting food and walking.
Once I walked through Montmartre and saw a Clochard standing at a tourist resto taking food of the plate of a couple. I then swapped Legion Corporal de Chef and made him leave.
Sooooo.... there is a chance that I did not do the math entirely correctly even so knowing about John's actions.
The John Galliano Spring/Summer 2000 men’s collection—often grouped with the "Hobo" and "Asylum" aesthetic of his broader 2000 work—was a theatrical explosion of street grit and historical drama.
While he was simultaneously revolutionizing Dior with the debut of the Saddle Bag that season, his namesake menswear line leaned into raw, deconstructed storytelling.Key Aesthetic Themes
The "Hobo" Influence: Heavily inspired by the homeless people Galliano observed on the streets of Paris, featuring "distressed" textures.
Newspaper Prints: A hallmark of this era, the iconic "Galliano Gazette" print appeared on everything from waistcoats to accessories.
Theatrical Masculinity: Models were styled as characters—part 18th-century dandy, part modern-day nomad.
Provocative Tailoring: Sharp, oversized coats paired with intentionally tattered fabrics and layered accessories
If the face was because their buddy had no Hugo Boss, but was just recently shopping ... being Germans???
#MODInc
#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure