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The Courtroom of Style: Judge Janice Rogers Brown

Last week we asked for your input on the most flattering hairstyle for Judge Janice Rogers Brown, of the exceedingly prestigious D.C. Circuit. Judge Brown, a high-powered and conservative jurist, may someday be the first African-American woman to sit on the Supreme Court.

We offered you a choice of two looks: "Bangs Janice" and "Perm Janice." And "Bangs Janice" won in a landslide, with 92 percent of the vote.*

We can see why. Consider this reader email (with photographic support):

This is an easy one: "Bangs Janice" all the way. With bangs, Judge Brown looks like the hip and attractive comedienne, Wanda Sykes:

janice rogers brown and wanda sykes.JPG

"Perm Janice," on the other hand, calls to mind a different black woman:

janice rogers brown and aunt jemima.JPG

We agree; Judge Brown should steer clear of that second look. Left-wingers already try to reduce Judge Brown to a racial stereotype (as BlackCommentator.com did when it published an offensive cartoon of her). Judge Brown doesn't need to help them do it.**

Do you know of a prominent figure within the legal profession who sports two (or more) divergent looks? If so, please let us know. We're always seeking other candidates to go before the jury in ATL's Courtroom of Style.

* One reader objected to our hairstyle terminology. But even if our terms were erroneous, we provided photographs to make clear which hairstyle was which. So voters should not have been confused.

** Conservatives were outraged by the JRB cartoon. In the words of Byron York, the cartoon depicted Judge Brown "as a fat black woman with huge lips, an unruly Afro, and an enormous backside."

Earlier: A Random Friday Poll: The Hairstyles of Judge Janice Rogers Brown


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Comments

actually, I think "Perm Janice" bears an unfortunate resemblance to Flotilla DeBarge in that photo.

I don't get the fuss about the Aunt Jemima stereotype -- historically black women have worked hard, done whatever they had to do given social/economic constraints in order to earn a living. Why should that be disparaged?