Trump Hair Comes Undone Again March 22 2018

Critic's Notebook

After the campaign rally in Tulsa, an accessory becomes a symbol.

With tie undone, President Trump arrived at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland early on Sunday, following his Make America Great Again rally in Tulsa, Okla., the evening before.
Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times

It is the picture show of the tie, like the echo of the words, that lingers. The necktie no longer secured in its big, boastful knot, merely rather hanging limply around the neck, like a boxer on the ropes. The tie, that has been every bit close to a sartorial spirit animate being as President Trump has had, along with his carmine MAGA lid and his elaborately constructed hair, completely untied.

The tie equally it was in the small hours of Dominicus morning as the president arrived at Andrews military base from his ill-fated entrada rally in Tulsa, Okla., later landing by helicopter at the White Business firm and striding beyond the Southward Lawn, MAGA cap crushed in one hand. The tie equally most observers could never remember seeing it before, at to the lowest degree around the neck of this president.

Together, the two accessories created an epitome as striking equally those of the sparsely populated rows in Tulsa, and the empty overflow area outside. And as potentially symbolic, though probably not in the way Mr. Trump would like.

Later on all, this is not a president who ascribes to the shirt sleeves photo op. Not someone who invites his electorate in to meet him, jacket tossed bated, elbows-deep in work at his desk. Not someone interested, like President Barack Obama and former Prime Government minister David Cameron of Britain or even one-time Vice President Joe Biden, who seems equally comfy with or without a tie, in announcing his sensitivity to the younger generation and their value system by willingly rejecting the adjust.

He is, rather someone who believes securely in the pageantry of his function, of airbrushed adding (run across: Ivanka, Melania, even Jared), branding, and the power of costume. Be that pageantry in the generals whom he famously one time lauded every bit "straight from cardinal casting" or his disastrously staged march beyond Lafayette Park to St. John's Church building in response to the protests in Washington D.C.

Information technology'due south a tenet that was clearly on display in Tulsa not just in his own uniform — the flag-reflecting blue suit, white shirt, blood-red necktie — but in supporting acts that included Lara Trump, son Eric's married woman and a Trump campaign adviser, in a white wrap dress; Kimberly Guilfoyle, son Don Jr.'s girlfriend and chairwoman of the Trump Victory Finance Committee, in a brilliant blue wrap dress; and Kayleigh McEnany, the White Business firm press secretary, in red, like a matching patriotic array.

And when it comes to Mr. Trump's costume, the necktie matters. Especially the bright cerise tie, which he made his doppelgänger during the 2016 campaign, glowing in all its Republican glory; subliminally reminding everyone of the party'due south Reagan heyday; of the skilful old times when everyone dressed according to establishment function; representing, in all its ridiculous, beneath-the-belt length — well, who knows? Something! Manhood or power or Mr. Trump'southward willingness to stretch the rules (he too Scotch-taped the back, call back?). The psychological speculation has been endless, and varied.

The problem is, when the tie becomes a sign of victory, it can also be a sign of defeat. Then it looked Sunday morning. Certain, it was very early on. You can empathise why a tie might be undone. But Mr. Trump understands every bit well every bit anyone that he is always on brandish, always playing his part. There isn't really a backstage in his job, especially during his entrance and exit moments.

Add to that the cap-in-hand, and the symbolism gets pretty loaded. As one observer tweeted, "I mean, when does a baseball motorcoach scrunch up their team cap — information technology own't when they're winning, is information technology?"

Nope. It's usually when they are about to throw it on the ground and jump upwards and down on it in frustration and disgust, because nothing is going according to plan. At least in the movies, from which Mr. Trump does seem to derive near of his cues.

Which is why, through all the bombast and brouhaha, the denialism and accusations, that both characterized the bomb in Oklahoma and followed it, the unplanned photo op stood out every bit a rare moment of truth, defenseless on camera. It was real Reality TV.

The campaign rally was supposed to be the outset of a new phase (pun intended). Maybe information technology actually will be.

murphywherriented.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/22/style/trump-tulsa-tie.html

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