What Is Going on with Trump’s Pant Legs? One Humble Theory

There’s a photo of Donald Trump from last weekend that I can’t stop thinking about. It’s from the Easter service in Palm Beach, where he’s standing between Tiffany and his wife, Melania, an odd sight for sure. I assume Melania is saying, “Do you two know each other?” But that’s not even the compelling part.

The really compelling part is that his pant legs are enormous. They’re each roughly the circumference of a healthy toddler’s head. They could fit comfortably around The Rock’s thighs—an image no one wanted to consider, but in the name of this investigation, we must. The angle of the photo makes it even more dramatic, with the grass hiding the president’s feet, shortening his overall frame and terminating his body at a wide point. Even so, those hems do not lie.

Per widely accepted lore, Trump buys expensive suits, but doesn’t have them tailored to fit his body. In 2004’s Trump: Think Like a Billionaire, “he” wrote, “I wear Brioni suits, which I buy off the rack.” Hope Hicks once confirmed that he bought Brioni suits and also wore Martin Greenfield Clothiers. Both are companies willing and able to set a man back many thousands of dollars, and yet the bagginess of it all gives the look a discount feel.

One may be able to distill an entire worldview from a self-professed billionaire’s choice to forego tailoring an expensive suit, but I’m wondering if there’s something far more nefarious afoot—something that, if proven, could impact the course of this American experiment forever: are the president’s pant legs getting wider?

Here are his relatively slim pant legs at inauguration:

Newly elected president, Donald Trump and Melania depart St. John’s Episcopal Church on Inauguration Day, January 20, 2017.

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Newly elected president, Donald Trump and Melania depart St. John’s Episcopal Church on Inauguration Day, January 20, 2017.
By Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images.

Here they are this past February:

Trump walks to Marine One on February 1st.

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Trump walks to Marine One on February 1st.
By Mark Wilson/Getty Images.

Here’s a tapered pair in his first week of his first term:

Trump walks to the West Wing of the White House after returning from a trip to Philadelphia on January 26, 2017.

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Trump walks to the West Wing of the White House after returning from a trip to Philadelphia on January 26, 2017.
By Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images.

Here they are on St. Patrick’s Day:

Trump and Melania greet Ireland’s Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar at the White House on March 15th.

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Trump and Melania greet Ireland’s Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar at the White House on March 15th.
By Alex Edelman/Pool/Getty Images.

Photos here are taken from the side are supposed to be the wider angle compared to the front view, according to the Law of Center-Creased Trousers. But the photos from Easter and St. Patrick’s Day were taken from the front. Inconclusive, but curious. Very curious.

An in-depth image search reveals that the last time he wore nearly well-fitting pants was sometime in 2003.

Trump and Melanie attend an event at the Cartier Mansion in New York City in 2003.

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Trump and Melanie attend an event at the Cartier Mansion in New York City in 2003.
By Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage.

And the last time his pant legs were not perfect, but reasonably proportioned, was over the summer.

Trump greets the press with Panama’s president Juan Carlos Varela at the White House on June 19, 2017.

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Trump greets the press with Panama’s president Juan Carlos Varela at the White House on June 19, 2017.
By Molly Riley/Pool/Getty Images.

His preference for big and baggy started a long, long time before that, but he was more apt to mix it up—a pant leg that grazes the top of his shoes here, a full-on zoot-suit riot there.

From left, Trump returns to the White House from a fundraiser in Dallas on October 25, 2017, Trump poses for a photograph with Melania as they arrive to dinner at the Elbphiharmone during the G20 Summit on July 7, 2017, Trump waves to the press on the South Lawn before departing to West Virginia on July 24, 2017.

Now it’s almost as if every time he knows there’s going to be a photo op, he pulls out the big boys.

But why? A couple theories. One is that he’s shrinking. It’s less a theory than an inevitable fact of being over 70. Bone density just isn’t what it used to be, and the pants are just meant for longer legs. So why wouldn’t he buy a new suit? He’s a rich man who likes nice things and is the president of the United States. It would be easy.

That leaves only one possibly: President Trump is signaling to the American people that he is Judging None and Choosing One. He’s subliminally provoking a JNCO mania in the hinterlands. The tool of this change agent? The slow widening his suit legs ever outward.

JNCO, the Los Angeles-based company that manufactures ludicrously large pants mostly in the United States, went out of business in the middle of February, after a failed attempt to revitalize its 90s heyday. Having made much of his efforts to save American jobs at air-conditioner manufacturing plants and coal, President Trump is now targeting a new, very specific area of the economy. He’s trying to raise the dead—and the dead in this case is the preferred pants of Limp Bizkit and Juggalos.

We know Trump is not in Limp Bizkit. But do we know whether or not Trump is a Juggalo? Has anyone confirmed a Juggalo is not in the highest office of the land? Has anyone actually checked the White House fridge for Faygo? Believe it or don’t believe it. But the truth is surely out there. Pull the stray threads on the enormous pant hems, and see how far this thing unravels.