













#learnwithjuli The term ‘camel toe’ can be traced back around the 12th century when a man crossed through the desert, only to notice striking similarities between the split hooves of these water-hoarding desert dwellers and the symmetrical centerfold created by labia molded into overly constrictive fabric. The man took this phrase and ran with it (quite literally) until he reached the nearest town, in which the term was coined as a descriptive fashion faux pas for centuries to come. This is the story of camel toe (oh, and this story is entirely made-up). The term ‘camel toe’ actually began circulating in the ‘90s but later became popularized in 2001 during a Late Night with Conan O’Brien skit titled “Camel Toe Annie,” featuring a woman wearing Spandex with a defining crease in the apex of her upper thighs. ‘Camel toe’ went on to become a critically acclaimed phrase in 2002, appearing in Urban Dictionary as a “crotch cleavage, especially on a woman. The outer lips of female genitalia visible through tight clothing.” A year later, the hit single “Cameltoe” was released by a Brooklyn-based hip-hop trio, Fannypack. It didn’t take long for a wave of backlash to devour media headlines when a group of women published the website Tights Are Not Pants in 2008, featuring printable posters with slogans that read, “Tell your friends: TIGHTS ARE NOT PANTS.” Major magazines, like Marie Claire, began calling camel toe “the most humiliating clothing disaster we know of” while proposing quick-fix solutions. To this day, the societal scolding of a camel toe is still widely inferred. This is the TRUE story of camel toe. Now hear the rest on the audio and enjoy the videos❤️❤️ #cameltoe #hairy #fyp