Got gotch? A brief analysis of underwear

What do those tightie-whities say about you as a man of the male persuasion?

Advertisement

Advertise with us

There comes a time in every man’s life when he is forced to make a life-altering decision.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 07/08/2018 (2902 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

There comes a time in every man’s life when he is forced to make a life-altering decision.

For me, that momentous occasion arrived last week.

It was the moment I looked in my underwear drawer and came to a shocking conclusion — it was time to replenish my stock of underpants.

Good ol’ briefs have been joined by a head-spinning array of other underwear styles. (Phil Carpenter / Montreal Gazette files)
Good ol’ briefs have been joined by a head-spinning array of other underwear styles. (Phil Carpenter / Montreal Gazette files)

I’m sorry to just blurt it out like that, but there is no point beating about the bush when it comes to replacing underwear that is long past its best-before date, if you catch my drift.

I hate to make sweeping generalizations, but allow me to point out this is one of those controversial issues that divides readers along gender lines as follows:

Typical female reader: “Buying underwear! Goodie!”

Typical male reader: “Dude?!”

So, yes, as I prepared to dress for the office last week, I discovered pretty much every pair of underpants I own now resembles my “lucky underwear,” which is a pair I have had for about 20-some odd years and slip on whenever I need things to go right — but, unfortunately, there is not much left of them other than a rubber waistband with a few shards of frayed greyish cotton dangling from it.

What I’m trying to say is I was forced to admit it was time to bid farewell to most of my deteriorating underwear stock and head to the store to buy replacement parts.

Which is where the bit about the life-altering decision comes in, because buying underwear in today’s modern social-media world is far more complicated than it was back in the day when the idea of Donald Trump becoming president of the United States would have evoked laughter, not tears.

The number of modern underwear options is literally mind-boggling, as anyone who has spent any time standing in that particular section of their local department store can tell you. (Yes, I am sure some extremely hip folks order their underpants online, but I personally don’t want to think about that.)

Despite being a veteran shopper, I was paralyzed with fear when I attempted to sort through all the various state-of-the-art undergarments on display.

We are talking underwear of every size and description, made from every natural and synthetic fabric known to man. (A quick plug here for those underpants made out of stretchy, breathable, golf-shirt-style material: Wow! Those things are crazy comfortable and they definitely keep your medically sensitive area cooler in muggy weather.)

The point is, guys in desperate need of fresh underpants must now make crucial decisions between (take a breath) briefs, boxers, boxer briefs, trunks, thongs, high-rise, low-rise, mid-rise, and whatever other style of underpants you care to name.

If a guy is lucky, he will not have to make the difficult decision, because his spouse or his mom will do that on his behalf. Which is what happened a couple of years ago when we were on a European river cruise and I discovered I had run short of underpants in Germany, so my wife and a bunch of the other women went shopping, and she returned to present me with a pair of electric-blue bikini briefs that (this is true) were fashioned from bamboo fibres.

“Ohmygawd! Those are super cute!” is what all my wife’s new friends chirped, clucking their tongues, when she pulled these avant-garde gotch out of the plastic bag during dinner.

Anyway, the reason I am telling you this today is because I want to offer some help to guys who are in need of quality underpants that will make a bold fashion statement. The important thing to remember is this: the type of underwear you choose will say a great deal about your personality. For example:

Briefs: What we are talking about here is nothing less than a classic. For decades, tightie-whities have been the go-to gotch (for the record, gonch and gitch are also acceptable) of men from every level of society. They are an example of perfect engineering and functionality. I personally hope whichever guy invented the Y-front was rewarded with several Nobel Prizes. 

The manly message they convey: I am a man’s man, a guy who does not change direction depending on which way the wind is blowing. I may be old-fashioned, but I will never (bad word) go out of style.

Boxers: You boxer-wearing guys know who you are. And so do the rest of us, because we can see all that fabric bunched up under your khakis. When I was a kid, it was a known scientific fact that only “geezers” wore boxers, because a pair of tight-fitting briefs would have cut off their blood supply and caused them to pass out in the middle of their checkers tournament.

The manly message they convey: I am an old-school man’s man who likes his undershorts to give him room to move. I am not some fly-by-night fashionista. I also believe, most likely, the world is flat and that whole thing about man landing on the moon is probably a scam.

Boxer Briefs: From what I have read, these are now far and away the most popular style of undershorts for modern men. A fusion of both boxers and briefs, they are either the best of both worlds or an unholy alliance that spells the end of civilization as we know it.

Personally, I do not think we should just take two things and fuse them together. With the possible exception of “brunch,” because having breakfast and lunch together is totally awesome.

The manly message they convey: I cannot make up my (extremely bad word) mind. Boxers? Briefs? Hey, give me both in the same package! They should be perfect for guys who like to sit on the fence.

OK, I think we have spent enough mental energy on this topic for today. Now it’s time for you, the guy reader, to make your own decision.  Whatever you do, keep it brief.

doug.speirs@freepress.mb.ca

 

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

‘Weather whiplash’ leaves Winnipeg businesses sore

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Preview

‘Weather whiplash’ leaves Winnipeg businesses sore

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read 7:29 PM CDT

A spring and summer of intense weather has wreaked havoc on southern Manitoba, slamming it with torrential rain, tornadoes, intense heat and, now, wildfire smoke.

The Beer Can, a popular summer patio located next to the Granite Curling Club, had to close early Thursday due to a thunderstorm. Prior to that, customers had to deal with a blanket of smoke that rolled into town from wildfires raging in Ontario.

“We’re just keeping (staff) on standby and adapting to the weather as the days come,” said supervisor Kisis Angeconeb.

Winnipeg has seen its share of “weather whiplash” — the phenomenon of violent swings between extreme conditions in a short period of time.

Read
7:29 PM CDT

Main Street crash involving motorcycle linked to speeding

Morgan Modjeski 3 minute read Preview

Main Street crash involving motorcycle linked to speeding

Morgan Modjeski 3 minute read 8:30 PM CDT

Speed appears to be a factor in a serious four-vehicle collision, including a motorcycle, on Main Street Friday.

Police did not immediately release information about the crash, but at around 7 p.m., a large section of Main Street was taped off between Jarvis and Dufferin Avenue. Traffic was redirected and pedestrians were told to stay clear.

Behind the tape, a crumpled white sedan was smashed into the side of a building, and a damaged motorcycle was on its side in the middle of the street. Two SUVs were also damaged.

The Free Press watched video captured from cameras at the nearby Northern Hotel that shows the two vehicles involved in the crash — the motorcycle that had a rider and a passenger, and the white sedan — speeding side-by-side southbound on Main Street. The speed limit in the area is 50 kilometres per hour.

Read
8:30 PM CDT

Nine years for man who kidnapped delivery driver

Erik Pindera 5 minute read Preview

Nine years for man who kidnapped delivery driver

Erik Pindera 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

A delivery driver was kidnapped after the break-up of a business partnership involving “grey-market vapes” that were sold at Winnipeg convenience stores, a Manitoba judge has been told.

The Winnipeg Police Service said last week that investigators recently arrested a third suspect in the Oct. 11, 2024 incident, in which three men are accused of kidnapping the 22-year-old driver and holding him at gunpoint for hours as they stole merchandise from a storage facility.

One of the men arrested, 43-year-old Jonathon Ranger, pleaded guilty earlier this year to forcible confinement and two offences related to the stolen gun that was found when he was arrested in December 2024.

In June, he was sentenced to nine years in prison, minus time served, based on a joint recommendation from the Crown and defence as part of a plea bargain.

Read
Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Order of Manitoba awarded to 12 high-achievers

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Preview

Order of Manitoba awarded to 12 high-achievers

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Yesterday at 9:03 PM CDT

It was a full circle moment for a CFL superstar whose game included giving back.

Former Winnipeg Blue Bombers running back Andrew Harris was one of 12 Order of Manitoba recipients honoured at the Manitoba legislature on Thursday.

“It’s an indescribable feeling,” Harris said after the ceremony while holding one of his sons in his arms.

Harris joined Juno award-winning artist Chantal Kreviazuk, Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Joss Reimer, former premier Brian Pallister and others who have enriched the province, said Lt.-Gov. Anita Neville as she honoured the recipients.

Read
Yesterday at 9:03 PM CDT

First Nations’ concerns overshadowed by talk of major projects

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview

First Nations’ concerns overshadowed by talk of major projects

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read 6:23 PM CDT

The contrast could not have been more stark in Ottawa — unceded Algonquin territory — this week.

On one side, hundreds of chiefs and their proxies met at the annual summer meeting of the Assembly of First Nations to debate resolutions focused on issues — primarily crises — in their communities.

Of the 53 policy resolutions and two emergency resolutions proposed by the chiefs, pressing topics such as child welfare, housing, drinking water, poverty, Alberta separatism, citizenship, and online attacks from deniers of the atrocities of residential schools were all on the agenda.

On the other side, over seven cabinet ministers from the federal government showed up basically to argue the case for the fast-tracking of “major projects.”

Read
6:23 PM CDT

WEL Manitoba investment fund signs on with Canadian company in push to meet province’s menstrual products mandate

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Preview

WEL Manitoba investment fund signs on with Canadian company in push to meet province’s menstrual products mandate

Aaron Epp 5 minute read 7:54 PM CDT

An all-women, angel investment fund in Winnipeg is opening new doors for a Toronto-based company that produces organic, toxin-free tampons and pads.

WEL Manitoba recently voted to fund Marlow, a health startup that aims to revolutionize period care with the first-ever lubricated tampon designed for smoother and more comfortable insertion.

The fund’s investors were so impressed with Marlow they started linking the company with employers and retailers in the keystone province even before investing in the company, said Katie Hall Hursh, managing partner.

Those connections are being made in the lead-up to Sept. 1 — the day when all provincially regulated companies must provide free menstrual products to their employees.

Read
7:54 PM CDT