Some Notes on 100 Days of Biden Style
Though it took Joe Biden decades to reach the
presidency, in terms of style and message, every day counted toward the goal.
Once he was elected president, the “cool Grandpa” vibe
Joe Biden cultivated on the campaign trail metamorphosed into the dignified
image of a commander in chief who requires no “power suit” to telegraph
authority.Credit...Erin Scott for The New York Times
By Guy
Trebay
April 28,
2021
1. He spent
nearly a half-century in rehearsals.
If you want
to assess Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s first 100 days in office, it helps to wind back
nearly 18,000 days to the beginning. When President Biden was first elected to
the United States Senate, in Stone Age 1972, the country was still mired in
Vietnam; the Watergate break-in that would tank the Nixon incumbency failed when
bungling burglars dressed in business suits and surgical gloves were nabbed by
members of the Capitol Police department’s “bum squad” (as their lookout sat in
a motel across the street watching “Attack of the Puppet People”); and the
first episode of “The Price is Right” was aired on CBS, hosted by Bob Barker.
“The Price
is Right” is still around after nearly five decades. So, of course, is Mr.
Biden. (Mr. Barker, too, it should be noted.) Although now crowding 80,
President Biden retains some of the mediagenic qualities that ushered him into
the political limelight just as political theater became a daily amusement
thanks to a constant — if not yet a 24-hour — news cycle.
2. He had a
head start in the looks department.
Politicians
are, obviously, under no obligation to be comely — male ones, anyway. Still,
starting with the Kennedy presidency — the first in American history to be
fully televised — it has never hurt any candidate’s prospects to be
conventionally good-looking. We’ve seen the young Joe images on Twitter — he of
the boyish smile and a short-sleeved button-down red shirt. He looks a bit like
a scout leader, something that in those days you could say as a term of
approval.
The young
Biden appears alert, easygoing, guy next door. In “Prime Green,” Robert Stone’s
somewhat obscure memoir of a weed-fueled odyssey he took across the United
States in the ’60s, he made a stop in Salt Lake City. While the novelist spared
little affection for the state’s high desert capital, he indulged in some
generalizations about its population, saying of the locals that they were
perhaps the best-looking folks in the country, provided you like “the Anglo type.”
Mr. Biden
is physically cast in that same mold; his was the face of a second lead in a
’40s B-movie. And if anatomy is presidential destiny, Mr. Biden slots easily
into the role — somewhere between the reverse-engineered Everyman that was
Ronald Reagan and John F. Kennedy, the doomed Camelot princeling.
“I think he
played to all of that,” the men’s wear designer Billy Reid recently said of Mr.
Biden’s ability to capitalize on his natural attributes. “I think he shaped his
image in a Kennedy-esque way. He’s cultivated this super-American, East Coast
kind of look through the years, and he seems very comfortable with that.”
3. He found
a formula and refined it.
In fact,
there were several formulas that shifted as Mr. Biden went from candidate to
president-elect to the inauguration. The man the White House press secretary
Jen Psaki referred to early on as looking to project a “cool grandpa” vibe
sharpened his message as his campaign evolved. As the writer Geoff Colvin noted
in a shrewd analysis for Fortune, candidate Biden followed longstanding
management-consulting practice by dressing like the clients but a little bit
better.
Other than
at the debates, candidate Biden’s preferred uniform was a navy jacket,
unmatched (often gray flannel) trousers and an open-neck, striped button-down
shirt. If you drilled down into the details, his footwear could occasionally be
seen as too fancy: Regular Joes tend not to wear driving moccasins. Yet the
mirrored shades that caused the longtime political analyst Mark Shields to
grouse that the country needed to see “less of aviators Joe and more of
Scranton Joe” did not, in the end, seem to bother voters and may even have
aided in diverting attention from the glaring fact that, if elected, Mr. Biden
would become the oldest man in history to assume the presidency.
Then Mr.
Biden won. And almost immediately his attire shifted. Even before the pandemic
lockdown, the 400-year-old uniform that is a man’s suit was in trouble. (“We
hardly see anyone in a suit anymore — other than at a wedding, a funeral, in
court or if they’re a politician,” Mr. Reid said.) Still, as Mr. Biden’s
advisers are clearly aware, there remains no sartorial marker of authority and
status that reads more clearly than a suit. And, from the moment The Associated
Press declared Mr. Biden the winner, he has seldom been seen in anything other
than dark-colored suits worn with crisp white shirts (button-cuffed) striped
ties and dark lace-ups.
“The thing
I like is that his suits are impeccably tailored,” the men’s wear designer Todd
Snyder said. “Where a lot of men typically go too big, Biden is a good example
of exactly how a suit should be worn.”
“His
trousers have the perfect proportion and the right amount of break in the
pants,” he added, referring to that point where a trouser hem meets the top of
one’s shoes. You have only to observe the style missteps at the Academy Awards
to know that even the assistance of the world’s top designers and stylists is
no guarantee that guys as advantaged as Brad Pitt or Denzel Washington get this
part right.
“He cuts
such a chic silhouette,” said Michael Sebastian, the editor of Esquire. “And
that does several things. It gives him the appearance of being way more
youthful than he is. And it communicates something important about his
governing style.” That is, Mr. Sebastian said, Mr. Biden looks as if he has
come prepared to do business.
4. That is,
he looks presidential.
If
clothing, as Mr. Colvin noted, is a language, the Biden message is one of
physical command and taut assurance. While it was easy enough during the
campaign for his opponent to snipe about a “Basement Biden” hiding out in his
rec room in a Barcalounger, the physical evidence suggests Mr. Biden was
likelier to have been putting in miles on a Peloton.
“He’s
obviously fit for a guy of any age, and that never hurts when it comes to
wearing clothes,” Mr. Snyder said.
From
Inauguration Day onward, the clothes President Biden has worn tend toward
formal single-button suits in solid dark colors (designed by Ralph Lauren for
the Inauguration and since then by designers the White House declines to
identify); ties generally of Democrat blue, though on occasion reverting to
stripes but with the stripes usually going from the wearer’s upper right to
lower left, in the American manner (Barack Obama’s English-style rep stripes
tilted in the other direction); and shoes that are softly buff-polished.
Sure, there
are elements that can be interpreted as elitist, like the stainless Rolex
Datejust that, as my colleague Alex Williams piqued some liberals by noting,
Mr. Biden wore to his swearing in. (Presidents Clinton and Bush favored Timex;
Mr. Obama’s timepieces came from Shinola.)
5. He made
history by wearing P.P.E.
The most
potent symbol Mr. Biden has worn, of course, has been the protective mask that
drew derision on the campaign trail but may have been instrumental in getting
him elected.
6. Anatomy
is still destiny.
Without
question it is the body inside the clothes and the president’s carriage that
carries the most significance when it comes to looking at President Biden’s
style. Through both his ostentatious peppiness and the military uprightness of
his bearing, he seems determined to dispel doubts about a man of his years
carrying the burden of the presidency while simultaneously telegraphing
physical preparedness and an aura of steady authority.
“He doesn’t
need a power suit to communicate power,” said Valerie Steele, the director and
chief curator at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, recalling
Donald Trump’s $6,000 Brioni suits. “He’s old school in the sense that he’s
dressing in clothes and in a manner that is respectful of the job and of us as
Americans. People of my dad’s generation would have gotten that instinctively.”
In that
sense, President Biden’s austere wardrobe choices are a throwback. “His clothes
are like a uniform telling you that he understands the job and he’s carrying it
out in service to you as citizens,” Ms. Steele said. At a time when the
boundaries between public and private are badly eroded, and when dressing like
an adult baby in public is more rule than exception, it is reassuring to see a
presidential figure who is unambiguously adult.
7. The
Doug.
There is,
of course, another man at the center of American political life. That would be
Douglas Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris — former
entertainment lawyer, adoring husband, adorable dad-bod sex symbol for a
fervent and growing #DougHive fan base.
Mr. Emhoff
is not the first male political spouse, but he is the first second gentleman in
history. (Check out the T-shirts.) And while it is too soon to read the runes
for cues to the workings of a relationship that breaks so starkly with White
House tradition, it is clear at this point in the arc of a Biden administration
that Mr. Emhoff is content to tuck himself behind the first female, first
African-American and first Indian-American vice president. Aside from a Ralph
Lauren suit he wore to the inauguration, he dresses the part of Eve’s Rib in
“Kamala” T-shirts and ball caps blazoned with the Bison logo of the football
team at Howard University, Ms. Harris’s alma mater.
If Prince
Philip will be remembered as Queen Elizabeth’s “liegeman of life and limb,” Mr.
Emhoff may go down in history as Vice President Harris’s cheerleader in chief.
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