<p>(WARNING: POSSIBLY NWS) <a href="http://www.nypost.com/style/39213.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.nypost.com/style/39213.htm</a>
Discuss:)</p>
<p>HAHAHAHAHAHAHA. I wouldn't pay two cents for that.</p>
<p>It's sad, but there are girls at my school that would wear that.</p>
<p>OMG, that's not even a freakin dress!!!! it's more like a strip of fabric!! what the ???</p>
<p>Even if I had the chest to fill a piece of fabric like that i still wouldn't. That's even innappropriate for a 23 year old!</p>
<p>I wouldn't really say its inappropriate but it looks nasty on that girl</p>
<p>Hmm...we shall combine two words, add a touch of 1337, and get: The Pr0n queen.</p>
<p>Seriously, that's pretty damn sick....</p>
<p>Faux, explain to me how that is even remotely appropriate? Especially for a prom dress.</p>
<p>i just love how it costs 495 dollars and yet looks like it should cost three dollars. How could anyone with the smallest vestige of taste buy it? that beading is horrific and looks like droplets of saliva more than anything. the saliva-esque design is the most concentrated at the worst parts too. the neckline is just awful, who decided on the square "just-about-to-fall-off-the-shoulders" look? and why oh why do those straps cross? and that waistline could make the thinnest tallest girl look shot-torso-ed and plump. it's mindboggling.</p>
<p>it's good to have XY chromosomes... otherwise i would go insane worrying over my looks and crap...</p>
<p>Hey, they quoted kids from my school</p>
<p>
[quote]
Students at Stuyvesant High School were just as appalled.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>:) But that is just wrong, I would think poorly of any girl wearing that. Also, it's very disruptive of the educational process, it's quite distracting.</p>
<p>how much of the "educational process" goes on at prom anyway?</p>
<p>just one word: SICK!
... i think that dress is pathetic.. and yeah lol what is the educational process in a prom? :D</p>
<p>
[quote]
"On the night of the prom, we have chaperones at the entry looking at every dress. We also provide needle, thread and pins to close up holes and fix dresses to the appropriate length," she says
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I found that part kind of funny actually. I'm glad my prom isn't school sponsored (and it's after we graduate) although I still don't think anyone would wear that. Ickk</p>
<p>easy access, i guess</p>
<p>might as well go naked for "easy access", you'd look classier.</p>
<p>no, its definitely classier to waste $500 on that thing</p>
<p>haha...the 'dress' is horrible</p>
<p>The article actually kind of bothered me though. The fact that schools are so uptight about the dress code at prom is stupid. I don't think it's right to make sure a girl has 'dignity' on prom night to protect her. Teenagers aren't mindless creatures and can make their own decisions. I would never wear that thing, but if I knew my school said no to a girl I would be ****ed off that they were trying control someone's personal style choices. 'Distractions' don't matter at a social event.</p>
<p>"Teenagers aren't mindless creatures and can make their own decisions."</p>
<p>Unfortunately, the ones at my school certainly seem to be.</p>
<p>maybe it could be the high school's business if her dress fell off at some point during the night (you know it would) and some rather innocent people got an eyeful, their parents could always sue for causing their child emotional distress. i know it sounds retarded, but this is the american justice system we're talking about here</p>