By Viviana videos.
Hello my internet divas!!
My name is Vivian.
And before you ask—no, I am not mean. I am observant. There is a difference.
Mean people enjoy cruelty. I enjoy accuracy.
I did not wake up one day and decide to talk about fashion. Fashion came to me first, by attacking my eyes, unprovoked, in public spaces.
On buses. In malls. On social media. At weddings. At funerals. In places where shame should still be alive and breathing.
Let me be very clear: this is not about money.
Some of the worst outfits I've ever seen were worn by people who could afford taste but chose audacity instead.
Fashion is not about labels. It's not about trends. It's not about confidence either, because confidence without self-awareness is just public disturbance.
And yet, every day, people wake up, look in the mirror, and say, "Yes. This is acceptable."
It is not.
I'm here because society needed someone to say it gently—but firmly—with humor, elegance, and a little bit of intellectual violence.
So welcome, have a seat and drinks.
This is my introduction.
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The Confidence Delusion
There is a dangerous lie floating around modern society, and it goes like this:
"If you're confident, anything looks good."
No.
If you are confident and wrong, you are simply wrong louder.
Confidence does not magically turn neon green skinny jeans into a personality.
Confidence does not excuse sandals with socks that look like they've seen war.
Confidence does not justify wearing three patterns, two fake chains, and a jacket meant for an entirely different climate.
Confidence should support good taste—not replace it.
I've seen people walk into rooms dressed like a confused Pinterest board, smiling proudly, as if courage alone can save them.
It can't. Courage is admirable. Your outfit is not.
We need to stop lying to people.
Sometimes the kindest thing you can say is, "You need to change."
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Fast Fashion, Faster Mistakes
Fast fashion promised accessibility. What it delivered was chaos.
Entire wardrobes built on impulse. Clothes worn once, never again, abandoned like bad relationships.
Outfits chosen not because they fit, but because they were trending six minutes ago.
People no longer dress for themselves. They dress for algorithms.
I see it everywhere:
– Pants designed to end conversations.
– Shirts cropped so aggressively they seem angry.
– Dresses that appear to be negotiating with gravity.
And the worst part? People think buying more will fix it.
It won't.
Bad fashion is not caused by lack of options.
It's caused by lack of editing. You don't need more clothes. You need fewer opinions and a mirror that tells the truth.
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Streetwear vs. Street Confusion
Streetwear was born from culture. From rebellion. From identity.
What it has become is a battlefield of oversized silhouettes and underthought decisions.
Not everything needs to be baggy.
Not everything needs to scream.
And no—wearing a hoodie three sizes too large does not automatically make you stylish. Sometimes it just makes you look like you borrowed laundry without asking.
I see people layering clothes like they're hiding secrets. Hoodies over jackets over vests over confusion.
Colors clashing like they met five seconds ago and already hate each other.
Streetwear is not supposed to look accidental.
It's supposed to look intentional.
If your outfit looks like you fell into a donation bin and emerged victorious, something went wrong.
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Luxury Without Taste Is Still Ugly
Let's address the elephant wearing a logo-covered tracksuit.
Luxury does not guarantee style.
It only guarantees expense.
There are people dressed head-to-toe in designer items who still look like a receipt came to life.
No balance. No restraint. No understanding that sometimes one statement piece is enough.
Wearing every expensive thing you own at once is not a flex.
It's a cry for help.
Taste whispers.
Insecurity yells in bold fonts.
I've seen elegance ruined by excess. I've seen beautiful clothes murdered by poor combinations.
And I've seen people defend it by saying, "You wouldn't understand."
Oh, I understand perfectly. That's the problem.
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The Social Media Effect
Social media has convinced people that if an outfit looks good in one angle, under one light, with one pose—it must be good in real life.
It is not.
Life is not a ring light.
Movement exists. Sitting exists. Wind exists.
An outfit that collapses the moment you walk is not a good outfit. An outfit that only works if you don't breathe is not a good outfit.
And yet, people commit to these clothes daily, trusting filters more than reality.
Then they go outside.
And reality is unforgiving.
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Why I'm Saying This
I'm not here to bully.
I'm here to document.
Fashion reflects society. It reveals insecurity, trends, class anxiety, identity struggles, and rebellion.
When people dress badly en masse, it's not random—it's cultural.
And I love culture. I respect it. That's why i'm honest about it.
If you feel attacked right now, pause.
Ask yourself why.
Good taste does not need defending.
Bad taste always does.
This is only the beginning.
In Part 2, I will talk about:
Color crimes
Event-inappropriate outfits
Gendered fashion lies
The difference between individuality and stubbornness
And why some people should be legally required to ask a friend before leaving the house
So stay with me.
I haven't even started yet.
