In a move that has sent shockwaves through the nation's high streets, a prominent teen fashion brand has shuttered its fitting rooms, citing 'unprecedented safety fears'. Ah, safety fears. The go-to euphemism for 'we can't control our feral customers'. The brand, whose name I shan't dignify with repetition, has apparently grown weary of finding shattered mirrors, used syringes, and, on one memorable occasion, a live badger in their changing cubicles. The youth of today, it seems, have transformed retail therapy into retail anarchy.
Let us not mince words: the fitting room has become the coliseum of consumerism. Where once modest teenagers would twirl in ill-advised crop tops, now gangs of feral youths conduct impromptu fashion shows of chaos. They graffiti the walls with existential angst, they film TikToks of themselves stealing hats, and they leave the place looking like a bomb went off in a Primark. The brand's response? Slap a padlock on the problem and pretend it never happened.
This is not an isolated incident. Retailers across the land are quietly boarding up their changing areas faster than a hedge fund manager hides his bonus. The high street, already a patient in the hospice of capitalism, has developed a new symptom: fitting room phobia. Employees now cower behind tills while scanning for suspicious bulges under puffer jackets. The message is clear: if you want to try something on, either buy it and hope for the best, or strip down in the frozen food aisle of Iceland.
Of course, the official line from the brand is a masterpiece of bureaucratic bafflegab: 'The safety and wellbeing of our customers and colleagues is our number one priority.' Translation: 'We can't be arsed to hire security, so you'll all just have to guess your size.' This is the same logic that gave us airport security, tamper-proof paracetamol, and the breathalyser. We are slowly but surely eliminating all opportunity for human trust and dignity.
Now, I'm not advocating for the return of the communal changing room of the 1970s, where everyone shared the same scratchy carpet and dubious lighting. But must we surrender to the lowest common denominator? Must we allow a handful of hoodie-clad hooligans to dictate the retail experience for the law-abiding sartorial souls who just want to know if their bum looks big in this?
The implications are dire. Without fitting rooms, we will be forced to endure the indignity of purchasing garments blind, only to find at home that they make us look like a bag of salad. Returns will skyrocket. Landfills will overflow with ill-advised polyester. And the divorce rate among couples who attempt to buy each other clothes will hit record highs.
But perhaps there is a silver lining. Maybe this is the push we need to embrace a new era of clothing. A brave new world where we don't try things on at all. Where we wear shapeless sacks and judge each other on our inner beauty. Or perhaps, more realistically, we will all just shop online and rely on the mercy of a generous return policy.
In the meantime, I'll be conducting my own fitting room audits, armed with a flask of gin and a sartorial measuring tape. If you see me in a changing room, do not be alarmed. I am merely fighting the good fight, holding the line against the forces of chaos. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to find a live badger. I have a column to write.








