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Hotpants

Hotpants or hot pants are extremely short shorts. The term was first used by Women's Wear Daily in 1970 to describe shorts made in luxury fabrics such as velvet and satin for fashionable wear, rather than their more practical equivalents that had been worn for sports or leisure since the 1930s. Hotpants are worn above the knees around the thigh area. The term has since become a generic term for any pair of extremely short shorts. While hotpants were briefly a very popular element of mainstream fashion in the early 1970s, by the mid-1970s they had become associated with the sex industry, which contributed to their fall from fashion. However, hotpants continued to be popular as clubwear well into the 2010s and are often worn within the entertainment industry, particularly as part of cheerleader costumes or for dancers (especially backup dancers). Performers such as Britney Spears and Kylie Minogue have famously worn hotpants as part of their public performances and presentation.

Brocade hotpants modelled by Larysa Poznyak for Bebe, 2008
Man wearing pink hotpants for a gay pride event, 2010

Origins and terminology edit

While the term "hotpants" is used generically to describe extremely short shorts,[1] similar garments had been worn since the 1930s.[1] These garments, however, were designed mainly for sports, beachwear and leisure wear, while hotpants were innovative in that they were made from non-activewear fabrics such as velvet, silk, crochet, fur and leather, and styled explicitly to be worn on the street, for parties, or even as bridal wear.[2][3][4] Dorothy Tricario, a fashion curator at the Brooklyn Museum told The New York Times in 1971 that hotpants were part of a greater nostalgic revival of 1930s and 1940s fashion, specifically the short posing shorts worn by Hollywood stars like Ruby Keeler, Deanna Durbin, and Betty Grable.[5] However, Tricario also observed that shorts had never before had such widespread acceptance as street or business wear as they did in early 1971.[5]

According to the fashion publicist Eleanor Lambert, the term "hot pants" was coined by Women's Wear Daily (WWD) in 1970 to describe fashions innovated by the French ready-to-wear company Dorothée Bis.[6] The WWD claim to have originated the term is also backed up by 1971 articles in The New York Times and the African-American magazine Jet.[5][7] Jet's fashion editor, Audrey Smaltz, suggested that because hotpants were best suited to Black women, they should be called "Knockout Shorts" as that name was more "relevant to Blacks", expressing the fashionable African-American woman's pride in her "knockout body" as well as paying tribute to Black identity and recent struggles.[7] Other alternative names included "les shorts", "short cuts", "cool pants", and "shortootsies", with "booty shorts" as an early 21st-century term.[2] Today, the term hotpants can be used for casual as well as fashion-wear short-shorts made in any fabric.[8][9]

While hotpants were principally marketed to women, men were also targeted, and the term can describe very short men's shorts.[1][2][9][10]

Reception edit

At the end of the 1960s, the fashion industry had tried unsuccessfully to promote the mid-calf-length or midi skirt as a fashionable replacement for the miniskirt.[2][7] In contrast to the lukewarm response to the midi, shoppers enthusiastically embraced the idea of short shorts, which were made available at all price levels from haute couture to inexpensive ready-to-wear.[2] Lambert credits Mariuccia Mandelli of the Italian fashion label Krizia with designing the first "hot pants" in 1970.[6] Hotpants are also increasingly credited to Mary Quant, who offered brief shorts in the late 1960s,[2][11][12][13] although these were intended as modesty knickers to wear with matching minidresses rather than standalone fashion garments.[14] Many designers from across the Western world produced their own versions of hotpants at all price levels, including Yves Saint Laurent, Valentino, Halston, and Betsey Johnson.[2] Mass-produced versions were also sold through the Sears mail-order catalogue.[2]

Hotpants were available for women, men and children, although they were principally worn by women.[10] Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis bought a pair for wear while yachting,[10] while other high-profile wearers included Elizabeth Taylor, Raquel Welch, and Jane Fonda.[2] Hotpants were also worn by particularly adventurous men such as David Bowie, Sammy Davis Jr. and Liberace.[15] Hotpants for men were slightly longer than the women's versions, although they were still shorter than usual.[1]

The James Brown song "Hot Pants (She Got to Use What She Got to Get What She Wants)", released in August 1971, was, according to his trombonist Fred Wesley, inspired by the sight of women of all colours wearing hotpants in a wide range of materials in the Black and White Club, Brussels.[16]

The historian Valerie Steele noted that hotpants, both as a name, and as a garment, quickly became associated with sexuality and prostitution due to their popularity with male spectators.[10][4] In January 1971, a Manhattan-based male psychiatrist suggested that the popularity of hotpants lay in how they expressed a "female's new freedom", borrowing his phrasing from the women's liberation movement,[10] but then went on to suggest that the wearer of hotpants wanted to relate to other people by drawing attention through "sexually provocative" dressing as a "prelude to a genuine relationship".[5] By the mid-1970s, extremely short shorts had become shorthand for prostitution, particularly underage prostitution, as exemplified by the 1976 film Taxi Driver, in which Jodie Foster's child-prostitute character was dressed in a pair of hotpants.[10] Such associations contributed to hotpants becoming unattractive as a part of a woman's everyday wardrobe, although they remained popular wear in entertainment, party-wear and some evening contexts.[10] The controversial associations with hotpants were still an issue in 1999, when Britney Spears posed for a photoshoot in Rolling Stone wearing a pink pair.[10] The photographs, taken by David LaChapelle, presented Spears in provocative poses, surrounded by dolls and tricycles, with the word "Baby" rhinestoned across the seat of her hotpants, and led to widespread media debate and public commentary about whether it was appropriate for role models for young girls to present themselves in such a "highly sexualised" manner.[17]

In 2000, Kylie Minogue notably wore a pair of gold lamé hotpants in her music video for "Spinning Around", which led to widespread media focus on the garment and the singer's body within.[18][19] The hotpants were eventually donated by Minogue to the Performing Arts Collection museum at the Arts Centre, Melbourne, where they are described as "one of the most identifiable items of contemporary popular culture."[20]

Hotpants, also called booty shorts continue being popular well into the 2010s, and are often seen in particular contexts such as Miami's South Beach and Venice Beach, Los Angeles, whose beach-to-bar environments have unique dress codes.[2]

In uniforms edit

 
Philadelphia Phillies Hot Pants Patrol uniform, 1975
 
A Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader wearing uniform hotpants, 2011

Hotpants can also be part of a uniform worn by cheerleaders (as made popular by the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders) and performers, or required wear in certain service industries (such as the Hooters restaurant chain).[10] Southwest Airlines became notorious for the hotpants uniform they supplied for their stewardesses (nicknamed "Love Birds") in 1971, as featured in an ad campaign with the slogan "Someone Else Up There Who Loves You."[21] The tangerine-coloured uniforms (designed by Juanice Gunn Muse, the wife of M. Lamar Muse, the Southwest Airlines president) were worn by girls who were chosen for their good looks and friendliness.[22] Lamar Muse boasted that having beautiful attendants in hotpants ensured that male passengers would fight to sit on the aisle rather than by the window.[21] However, feminist organisations such as Stewardesses for Women's Rights protested and lobbied against the uniform.[23] Also in 1971, the Hot Pants Patrol was introduced as an elite corps of female ushers for the Philadelphia Phillies baseball team, with the intention of attracting greater audiences for the games.[24] While the majority of "Fillies" wore white microskirts as part of their uniform, the 36 members of the Hot Pants Patrol wore a red hotpants jumpsuit with white vinyl go-go boots.[24] After pressure from feminist organisations, the Phillies retired the Hot Pants Patrol in 1982.[25]

Hotpants or booty shorts remain a popular costume for cheerleaders and dancers, particularly hip hop performers, and are frequently worn by backup dancers.[2][10] The uniform of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders consists of hotpants and midriff tops.[10] In the early 21st century hotpants continue to be part of certain service industry uniforms, particularly where the wearers are likely to serve a predominantly male clientele. One example of this is Hooters, where the servers (or "Hooters Girls") wear orange Dolphin shorts along with a tight tank top, pantyhose and a bra.[10]

Extremely short shorts have also seen use within military use. Unofficially, members of the Rhodesian and South African armed forces wore extremely short shorts due to fighting in the hot climates there. The Austrian Army also used short shorts for PT wear.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Russell, I. Willis; Porter, Mary Gray (1993). "Among The New Words". In Algeo, John; Algeo, Adele S. (eds.). Fifty Years Among the New Words: A Dictionary of Neologisms 1941–1991. Cambridge University Press. pp. 167–168. ISBN 9780521449717.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Moore, Jennifer Grayer (2015-12-14). Fashion Fads Through American History: Fitting Clothes into Context. ABC-CLIO. pp. 68–71. ISBN 9781610699020.
  3. ^ Cumming, Valerie; Cunnington, C.W.; Cunnington, P.E. (2010). The dictionary of fashion history. Oxford: Berg. ISBN 9781847887382.
  4. ^ a b Steele, Valerie (2000). Fifty years of fashion: new look to now (English ed.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 87. ISBN 9780300087383.
  5. ^ a b c d Klemesrud, Judy (January 31, 1971). "Is That a Way to Save Face? Sell Hot Pants.". In Haberman, Clyde (ed.). New York Times: The Times of the Seventies: The Culture, Politics, and Personalities that Shaped the Decade. Hachette Books. ISBN 9781603763332.
  6. ^ a b Lambert, Eleanor (1976). World of fashion: people, places, resources. New York: R. R. Bowker Co. pp. 53, 132. ISBN 9780835206273.
  7. ^ a b c Smaltz, Audrey (25 March 1971). "HotPants, Or 'Knockout-Shorts', Worn By Sexy, Proud Women!". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company: 42–43.
  8. ^ Sieczkowski, Cavan (19 May 2014). "Jennifer Lopez Wears Leather Hotpants Like No Other". Huffington Post India. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  9. ^ a b Singh, Anita (16 June 2009). "Rio Ferdinand emulates Ronaldo in hotpants". The Telegraph. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Peril, Lynn (2008). "Hot Pants". In Mitchell, Claudia; Reid-Walsh, Jacqueline (eds.). Girl Culture: Studying girl culture : a readers' guide. ABC-CLIO. pp. 362–3. ISBN 9780313339097.
  11. ^ Historical Dictionary of the Fashion Industry. Scarecrow Press. 19 November 2007. ISBN 9780810864191. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  12. ^ Werlin, Katy (2015). "Hot Pants". In Blanco F., José; Hunt-Hurst, Patricia Kay; Lee, Heather Vaughan; et al. (eds.). Clothing and Fashion: American Fashion from Head to Toe. ABC-CLIO. p. 160. ISBN 9781610693103.
  13. ^ Hamer, Louise; Blum, Stella (1 January 1981). Clark, Rowena (ed.). Fabulous Fashion 1907–67: Exhibition from the Costume Institute, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. International Cultural Corporation of Australia. p. 94.
  14. ^ Milford-Cottam, Daniel (2020). Fashion in the 1960s. Shire Publications. pp. 16–17. ISBN 9781784424084.
  15. ^ Stewart, Gail (1999). The 1970s. Lucent Books. p. 66. ISBN 9781560065579. By 1972, there were even a few adventurous men wearing hot pants, including singers David Bowie, Sammy Davis Jr., and Liberace, who wore a red-white-and-blue pair
  16. ^ Wesley, Fred (2002-09-25). Hit Me, Fred: Recollections of a Sideman. Duke University Press. p. 138. ISBN 082238695X.
  17. ^ Duke, Andrea; Cornish, Lindsay (30 December 2007). "Britney Spears". In Mitchell, Claudia; Reid-Walsh, Jacqueline (eds.). Girl Culture: Studying girl culture: a readers' guide. ABC-CLIO. pp. 547–550. ISBN 9780313339097.
  18. ^ Halligan, Benjamin; Edgar, Robert; Fairclough-Isaacs, Kirsty (26 June 2013). The Music Documentary: Acid Rock to Electropop. London: Routledge. p. 228. ISBN 978-0-415-52802-3. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  19. ^ Ricketson, Matthew (27 July 2002). "Kylie's seat of power". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  20. ^ "Kylie Minogue – Kylie Minogue Donates Famous Hot Pants To Australian Museum". Contactmusic.com. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  21. ^ a b Whitelegg, Drew (2007-06-01). Working the Skies: The Fast-paced, Disorienting World of the Flight Attendant. NYU Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9780814794074.
  22. ^ Wald, Matthew L. (7 February 2007). "M. Lamar Muse, 86, Dies; Led Southwest Airlines". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  23. ^ Tiemeyer, Phil (2013). Plane Queer: Labor, Sexuality, and AIDS in the History of Male Flight Attendants. University of California Press. pp. 110–111. ISBN 9780520274778.
  24. ^ a b "City of Brotherly Love gets Hot Pants Patrol". The Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. 2 April 1971.
  25. ^ "The Phillies "Hot Pants Patrol" Was Indeed A Thing, Once Upon A Time". PHILEBRITY. Retrieved 21 April 2017.

External links edit

  • Staff writer (29 January 1971). "An improbable fashion fad arrives in midwinter: HOT PANTS". LIFE. Time Inc.
  •   The dictionary definition of hot pants at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Hot pants at Wikimedia Commons

hotpants, this, article, about, item, clothing, other, uses, pants, pants, extremely, short, shorts, term, first, used, women, wear, daily, 1970, describe, shorts, made, luxury, fabrics, such, velvet, satin, fashionable, wear, rather, than, their, more, practi. This article is about the item of clothing For other uses see Hot Pants Hotpants or hot pants are extremely short shorts The term was first used by Women s Wear Daily in 1970 to describe shorts made in luxury fabrics such as velvet and satin for fashionable wear rather than their more practical equivalents that had been worn for sports or leisure since the 1930s Hotpants are worn above the knees around the thigh area The term has since become a generic term for any pair of extremely short shorts While hotpants were briefly a very popular element of mainstream fashion in the early 1970s by the mid 1970s they had become associated with the sex industry which contributed to their fall from fashion However hotpants continued to be popular as clubwear well into the 2010s and are often worn within the entertainment industry particularly as part of cheerleader costumes or for dancers especially backup dancers Performers such as Britney Spears and Kylie Minogue have famously worn hotpants as part of their public performances and presentation Brocade hotpants modelled by Larysa Poznyak for Bebe 2008Man wearing pink hotpants for a gay pride event 2010 Contents 1 Origins and terminology 2 Reception 3 In uniforms 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOrigins and terminology editWhile the term hotpants is used generically to describe extremely short shorts 1 similar garments had been worn since the 1930s 1 These garments however were designed mainly for sports beachwear and leisure wear while hotpants were innovative in that they were made from non activewear fabrics such as velvet silk crochet fur and leather and styled explicitly to be worn on the street for parties or even as bridal wear 2 3 4 Dorothy Tricario a fashion curator at the Brooklyn Museum told The New York Times in 1971 that hotpants were part of a greater nostalgic revival of 1930s and 1940s fashion specifically the short posing shorts worn by Hollywood stars like Ruby Keeler Deanna Durbin and Betty Grable 5 However Tricario also observed that shorts had never before had such widespread acceptance as street or business wear as they did in early 1971 5 According to the fashion publicist Eleanor Lambert the term hot pants was coined by Women s Wear Daily WWD in 1970 to describe fashions innovated by the French ready to wear company Dorothee Bis 6 The WWD claim to have originated the term is also backed up by 1971 articles in The New York Times and the African American magazine Jet 5 7 Jet s fashion editor Audrey Smaltz suggested that because hotpants were best suited to Black women they should be called Knockout Shorts as that name was more relevant to Blacks expressing the fashionable African American woman s pride in her knockout body as well as paying tribute to Black identity and recent struggles 7 Other alternative names included les shorts short cuts cool pants and shortootsies with booty shorts as an early 21st century term 2 Today the term hotpants can be used for casual as well as fashion wear short shorts made in any fabric 8 9 While hotpants were principally marketed to women men were also targeted and the term can describe very short men s shorts 1 2 9 10 Reception editAt the end of the 1960s the fashion industry had tried unsuccessfully to promote the mid calf length or midi skirt as a fashionable replacement for the miniskirt 2 7 In contrast to the lukewarm response to the midi shoppers enthusiastically embraced the idea of short shorts which were made available at all price levels from haute couture to inexpensive ready to wear 2 Lambert credits Mariuccia Mandelli of the Italian fashion label Krizia with designing the first hot pants in 1970 6 Hotpants are also increasingly credited to Mary Quant who offered brief shorts in the late 1960s 2 11 12 13 although these were intended as modesty knickers to wear with matching minidresses rather than standalone fashion garments 14 Many designers from across the Western world produced their own versions of hotpants at all price levels including Yves Saint Laurent Valentino Halston and Betsey Johnson 2 Mass produced versions were also sold through the Sears mail order catalogue 2 Hotpants were available for women men and children although they were principally worn by women 10 Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis bought a pair for wear while yachting 10 while other high profile wearers included Elizabeth Taylor Raquel Welch and Jane Fonda 2 Hotpants were also worn by particularly adventurous men such as David Bowie Sammy Davis Jr and Liberace 15 Hotpants for men were slightly longer than the women s versions although they were still shorter than usual 1 The James Brown song Hot Pants She Got to Use What She Got to Get What She Wants released in August 1971 was according to his trombonist Fred Wesley inspired by the sight of women of all colours wearing hotpants in a wide range of materials in the Black and White Club Brussels 16 The historian Valerie Steele noted that hotpants both as a name and as a garment quickly became associated with sexuality and prostitution due to their popularity with male spectators 10 4 In January 1971 a Manhattan based male psychiatrist suggested that the popularity of hotpants lay in how they expressed a female s new freedom borrowing his phrasing from the women s liberation movement 10 but then went on to suggest that the wearer of hotpants wanted to relate to other people by drawing attention through sexually provocative dressing as a prelude to a genuine relationship 5 By the mid 1970s extremely short shorts had become shorthand for prostitution particularly underage prostitution as exemplified by the 1976 film Taxi Driver in which Jodie Foster s child prostitute character was dressed in a pair of hotpants 10 Such associations contributed to hotpants becoming unattractive as a part of a woman s everyday wardrobe although they remained popular wear in entertainment party wear and some evening contexts 10 The controversial associations with hotpants were still an issue in 1999 when Britney Spears posed for a photoshoot in Rolling Stone wearing a pink pair 10 The photographs taken by David LaChapelle presented Spears in provocative poses surrounded by dolls and tricycles with the word Baby rhinestoned across the seat of her hotpants and led to widespread media debate and public commentary about whether it was appropriate for role models for young girls to present themselves in such a highly sexualised manner 17 In 2000 Kylie Minogue notably wore a pair of gold lame hotpants in her music video for Spinning Around which led to widespread media focus on the garment and the singer s body within 18 19 The hotpants were eventually donated by Minogue to the Performing Arts Collection museum at the Arts Centre Melbourne where they are described as one of the most identifiable items of contemporary popular culture 20 Hotpants also called booty shorts continue being popular well into the 2010s and are often seen in particular contexts such as Miami s South Beach and Venice Beach Los Angeles whose beach to bar environments have unique dress codes 2 In uniforms edit nbsp Philadelphia Phillies Hot Pants Patrol uniform 1975 nbsp A Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader wearing uniform hotpants 2011 Hotpants can also be part of a uniform worn by cheerleaders as made popular by the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders and performers or required wear in certain service industries such as the Hooters restaurant chain 10 Southwest Airlines became notorious for the hotpants uniform they supplied for their stewardesses nicknamed Love Birds in 1971 as featured in an ad campaign with the slogan Someone Else Up There Who Loves You 21 The tangerine coloured uniforms designed by Juanice Gunn Muse the wife of M Lamar Muse the Southwest Airlines president were worn by girls who were chosen for their good looks and friendliness 22 Lamar Muse boasted that having beautiful attendants in hotpants ensured that male passengers would fight to sit on the aisle rather than by the window 21 However feminist organisations such as Stewardesses for Women s Rights protested and lobbied against the uniform 23 Also in 1971 the Hot Pants Patrol was introduced as an elite corps of female ushers for the Philadelphia Phillies baseball team with the intention of attracting greater audiences for the games 24 While the majority of Fillies wore white microskirts as part of their uniform the 36 members of the Hot Pants Patrol wore a red hotpants jumpsuit with white vinyl go go boots 24 After pressure from feminist organisations the Phillies retired the Hot Pants Patrol in 1982 25 Hotpants or booty shorts remain a popular costume for cheerleaders and dancers particularly hip hop performers and are frequently worn by backup dancers 2 10 The uniform of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders consists of hotpants and midriff tops 10 In the early 21st century hotpants continue to be part of certain service industry uniforms particularly where the wearers are likely to serve a predominantly male clientele One example of this is Hooters where the servers or Hooters Girls wear orange Dolphin shorts along with a tight tank top pantyhose and a bra 10 Extremely short shorts have also seen use within military use Unofficially members of the Rhodesian and South African armed forces wore extremely short shorts due to fighting in the hot climates there The Austrian Army also used short shorts for PT wear See also editDaisy Dukes Miniskirt Stubbies brand References edit a b c d Russell I Willis Porter Mary Gray 1993 Among The New Words In Algeo John Algeo Adele S eds Fifty Years Among the New Words A Dictionary of Neologisms 1941 1991 Cambridge University Press pp 167 168 ISBN 9780521449717 a b c d e f g h i j k Moore Jennifer Grayer 2015 12 14 Fashion Fads Through American History Fitting Clothes into Context ABC CLIO pp 68 71 ISBN 9781610699020 Cumming Valerie Cunnington C W Cunnington P E 2010 The dictionary of fashion history Oxford Berg ISBN 9781847887382 a b Steele Valerie 2000 Fifty years of fashion new look to now English ed New Haven CT Yale University Press p 87 ISBN 9780300087383 a b c d Klemesrud Judy January 31 1971 Is That a Way to Save Face Sell Hot Pants In Haberman Clyde ed New York Times The Times of the Seventies The Culture Politics and Personalities that Shaped the Decade Hachette Books ISBN 9781603763332 a b Lambert Eleanor 1976 World of fashion people places resources New York R R Bowker Co pp 53 132 ISBN 9780835206273 a b c Smaltz Audrey 25 March 1971 HotPants Or Knockout Shorts Worn By Sexy Proud Women Jet Johnson Publishing Company 42 43 Sieczkowski Cavan 19 May 2014 Jennifer Lopez Wears Leather Hotpants Like No Other Huffington Post India Retrieved 4 February 2018 a b Singh Anita 16 June 2009 Rio Ferdinand emulates Ronaldo in hotpants The Telegraph Retrieved 4 February 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l Peril Lynn 2008 Hot Pants In Mitchell Claudia Reid Walsh Jacqueline eds Girl Culture Studying girl culture a readers guide ABC CLIO pp 362 3 ISBN 9780313339097 Historical Dictionary of the Fashion Industry Scarecrow Press 19 November 2007 ISBN 9780810864191 Retrieved 8 May 2017 Werlin Katy 2015 Hot Pants In Blanco F Jose Hunt Hurst Patricia Kay Lee Heather Vaughan et al eds Clothing and Fashion American Fashion from Head to Toe ABC CLIO p 160 ISBN 9781610693103 Hamer Louise Blum Stella 1 January 1981 Clark Rowena ed Fabulous Fashion 1907 67 Exhibition from the Costume Institute the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York International Cultural Corporation of Australia p 94 Milford Cottam Daniel 2020 Fashion in the 1960s Shire Publications pp 16 17 ISBN 9781784424084 Stewart Gail 1999 The 1970s Lucent Books p 66 ISBN 9781560065579 By 1972 there were even a few adventurous men wearing hot pants including singers David Bowie Sammy Davis Jr and Liberace who wore a red white and blue pair Wesley Fred 2002 09 25 Hit Me Fred Recollections of a Sideman Duke University Press p 138 ISBN 082238695X Duke Andrea Cornish Lindsay 30 December 2007 Britney Spears In Mitchell Claudia Reid Walsh Jacqueline eds Girl Culture Studying girl culture a readers guide ABC CLIO pp 547 550 ISBN 9780313339097 Halligan Benjamin Edgar Robert Fairclough Isaacs Kirsty 26 June 2013 The Music Documentary Acid Rock to Electropop London Routledge p 228 ISBN 978 0 415 52802 3 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Ricketson Matthew 27 July 2002 Kylie s seat of power The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Retrieved 13 December 2013 Kylie Minogue Kylie Minogue Donates Famous Hot Pants To Australian Museum Contactmusic com 14 February 2014 Retrieved 14 February 2014 a b Whitelegg Drew 2007 06 01 Working the Skies The Fast paced Disorienting World of the Flight Attendant NYU Press pp 48 49 ISBN 9780814794074 Wald Matthew L 7 February 2007 M Lamar Muse 86 Dies Led Southwest Airlines The New York Times Retrieved 26 April 2017 Tiemeyer Phil 2013 Plane Queer Labor Sexuality and AIDS in the History of Male Flight Attendants University of California Press pp 110 111 ISBN 9780520274778 a b City of Brotherly Love gets Hot Pants Patrol The Montreal Gazette Associated Press 2 April 1971 The Phillies Hot Pants Patrol Was Indeed A Thing Once Upon A Time PHILEBRITY Retrieved 21 April 2017 External links editStaff writer 29 January 1971 An improbable fashion fad arrives in midwinter HOT PANTS LIFE Time Inc nbsp The dictionary definition of hot pants at Wiktionary nbsp Media related to Hot pants at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hotpants amp oldid 1218153731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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