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“The jeans section at Uniqlo is still really big.” “After losing a lot of weight I decided to try some, but they were really uncomfortable so I threw them away.” I don’t wear them much in the city though.” “They’re good for camping, because they’re hard to tear or burn. “They’re really bad for the environment.”
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I think it’s because the pockets are too small for my smartphone.” I also don’t like how those ripped jeans look on girls. “I don’t want to wear something so hard and heavy. “Only science nerds and otaku wear them, right?” They’re heavy, stiff, difficult to dry, and have no functionality. However, I was very surprised to find a wave of anti-jeans sentiment in online comments about the news. My initial reaction to the theory was disbelief, and that people were just making a mountain out of a molehill. They also referred to the variety show Getsuyo Kara Yofukashi, which ran a segment in 2020 titled, “Young People Moving Away From Jeans.” In the segment, one young man who was interviewed said, “I don’t have a single pair of jeans.” To support this, the website Urban Life Metro cited that the number of pairs sold per year in Japan has shrunk by 30 percent over the past 20 years. Although the closure could be attributed to a number of factors, some news reports saw it as further evidence of jeans’ demise.