Athleisure

Megan Collins: If you do it right, I'm all for it. I think something athleisure does well is that you know when you look sloppy. You're not going to just go outside in sweatpants and be like, this is "athleisure." You have to put more thought into fit and cut and material, because otherwise you'll just look like you're a sloppy dude. I do think you can start to get into dangerous fashion with a capital "F" territory. If your sweatpants cost more than my overcoat, we might have a problem.

Ruthie Freidlander: I feel much the same way about athleisure as I do about women wearing leggings for any reason other than working out (or relaxing at home)—sweatpants serve a purpose, and that purpose is for sweating. I find that being comfortable should be a happy coincidence of getting dressed, not the sole reason for what you wear. So in terms of these dudes sporting athleisure? Save it for the gym. And speaking specifically about the drop crotch: That should just never happen. Not even in your own home.

Connie Wang: For the most part, I love athleisure on men. It's so huggable. The only time it becomes obnoxious is when men get too precious with it. Carrying around a Tide pen to spot clean stains or making a big deal if you start sweating in your tee—it's like, you're still wearing sweats, please calm down.

Consensus: It might be a tough sell, but as long as you focus on fit and fabric, and don't go overboard or get too weird with it, and you can probably pull it off.