It isn't that difficult, and no one needs to spend a fortune to look decent.īack to the recent DJ-on-tour episode apparently she did the easiest thing, turning her trackies inside out and away she went, though the incident caused an hour delay to the flight. READ MORE: Human Nature star shares secret to his 23-year marriage 'Chances are there would have been a few kids around or on the flight.' (Getty Images/iStockphoto)īefore you proclaim me as some ultra-conservo cancel-culture kook (you really, really don't know me then!), I would just love to see an element of class and style return to the skies instead of so many frequent and not-so-frequent fliers that look like they have fallen off the back of a Bali scooter. Let's be honest, most kids would hear the word 'f-k' in their everyday lives, but do they also need the word sitting next to them? Sponsored or not sponsored, chances are there would have been a few kids around or on the flight and, I don't know, I wouldn't have particularly liked having to explain to a six-year-old why the huck 'f-k' was the star attraction on a pair of sweats. "I was forced out of the plane and was harassed to take off my pants in front of the flight crews at the gate," the 36-year-old wrote, adding that she "never had an issue" wearing the pants on her current North American music tour.ĭuring the incident, Hwang had been wearing black sweatpants with the words "F-K," "F-K YOU," and "F-IN,'" printed all over them, which she said were sponsored by the clothing brand Ripndip. (Twitter)ĭJ Soda, whose real name is Hwang So-hee, took to Instagram and Twitter to detail how she was "harassed and humiliated" after boarding a flight from New York to Los Angeles. Recently, a popular South Korean DJ claimed she was kicked off an American Airlines flight and 'harassed' into taking off her sweatpants in public because they were deemed "inappropriate" and "offensive." DJ Soda said she was 'harassed and humiliated' over her sweatpants. Of course we want to be comfy (have you seen the size of some of those regional airline seats? They're definitely built for smashing us in, not for Architectural Digest comfort and style) but there IS a fine line between still being able to look smart and casual as opposed to looking like an extra from Banged Up Abroad. The one thing I can't stand is seeing passengers jump onto a plane looking like they are heading directly onto their comfortable lounge at home. "For as long as I can remember, I've always treated a flight as an 'occasion'"