Albert muzquiz gay
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“And so a few of my friends are really into that, so it provided this place for me to just talk about things that I liked and was super refreshing.”
And as @EdgyAlbert quickly realized, there was an appetite for more than just friendly banter about Our Legacy Boots and 1980s trucker jackets. Like, what is it about what I’m doing that’s different than what I used to do?”
Moreover, there’s some concern about the blurred lines between content and real life.
He leaves with three items: vintage Tommy Hilfiger shorts, a vintage high school varsity cardigan, and the all-cotton Dickies. He has no inhibitions about sharing information about where to find the best vintage pants, what to look for in a cowboy boot.
“I think the way to get the good stuff is you’re gonna have to do a little digging, do a little research, and I’m trying to encourage that way of thinking.
In fact, he recommends it as not just a bona fide style move, but as a worthwhile journey. The tag #mensfasahion has claimed 6.3 billion views and counting, and shorts discussing the intimacies of camp collar shirts and the resurgence of Blokecore alike routinely garner millions of views. Other papers in the department “were about the firebombing of Dresden or something, and I had this very silly write-about-jeans one,” he says.
After college, Muzquiz did some fashion writing and worked as a sales associate at one company that sells denim and other clothing and as a buyer at another.
I’m not the most web-literate person, so it’s funny that I’m even on the app and that it’s going well for me. Albert is willing to admit that the uncertainty of platforms like social media routinely gives him pause. It’s all wholesome and approachable, a refreshing bit of fun for anyone vaguely interested in clothes, vintage or great mustaches.
And while massive popularity and inherent virality of forums like TikTok have established overnight (and equally fleeting) fame as a commonplace, Muzquiz’s in particular doesn’t go unnoticed, or seem to be going anywhere.
Short in the body, pleated, with one chest pocket and a back cinch.
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Even in a saturated “FashionTok” he stands out; spurred on his charming good looks and penchant for dressing “like a hot dad,” Muzquiz’s content has struck a chord with millions of users looking for honest advice on how to dress well.
The intrigue with dressing well is at an all-time high, proliferated by an abundance of podcasts, articles, and yes, TikTok videos.
But as he tells Insidehook, in a roundabout way, this very fact may have contributed to his success.
“I think it has something to do with the fact that I’m a little bit older than people on the platform, and I’m just coming from a different place. “One of the earliest videos I did, I said something about vintage, and people were like, ‘What’s vintage?’ ’cause it’s like, ‘Oh, these are like 16-year-olds using the app, how can I make this as digestible and friendly as possible?’”
For Muzquiz, he views his role on the app and beyond as an educator.
“I think it teaches you so much about how long it takes for something to become beautiful,” Muzquiz tells InsideHook.
It makes sense that he’s good at it, having gone to a performing arts high school and then done sketch comedy and improv at Vassar. “You can go to any of these vintage stores and pay hundreds of dollars, but here I might be able to find that thing for two dollars,” he says. “I’ve always wanted to talk about clothes with people,” Albert explains.
“There’s a kind of discipline there, where you also learn so much about the construction quality of a garment in this very intimate way, and it just serves a great intro to clothing and style and wearing stuff in.”
Philosophical commentary on subjects like raw denim — “Distressed denim conforms to your body, so it becomes like a one-of-a-kind art piece that nobody else has,” as he explains — and the ideal party loafer have made Muzquiz an unlikely renaissance man on TikTok.