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Yoga pants protest held at home of R. Island man who told women to 'stop wearing them'

A man who criticized women for wearing yoga pants in public found hundreds of people picketing his home and thousands rebuking him on social media.

The pants are 'stinky, tacky, ridiculous looking,' and the look 'is bad,' man wrote in letter to the editor

Hundreds of people participating in a free lunch-hour yoga session in downtown Vancouver in July 2013. This past week, a Rhode Island man drew ire for saying that women should 'Grow up and stop wearing them in public.' (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

A male reader who sent a letter to a small Rhode Island newspaper criticizing women who wear yoga pants in public found that snug-fitting pants were the least of his problems as hundreds of people picketed his home and thousands rebuked him on social media. 

Alan Sorrentino, 63, in a letter to the Barrington Times — a newspaper which says it has a print circulation of 5,000 — described yoga pants as "stinky, tacky, ridiculous looking." 

"They do nothing to compliment a woman over 20 years old," he wrote in the letter, which was published on Wednesday. "In fact, the look is bad. Do yourself a favour, grow up and stop wearing them in public." 

On Monday, the letter was posted on news sites around the world and thousands of commenters made their feelings clear on Facebook and Twitter. 

Sorrentino told a Providence radio station, WPRO, that he had received death threats, and he compared the threats to those he had received in the past as an openly gay man. 

In the radio interview, he urged protesters to "calm down." 

Hundreds of women, girls and other supporters proudly donned their yoga pants and marched peacefully in a "Yoga Pants Parade" on Sunday, Oct. 23, around the neighbourhood of a man who derided the attire as tacky and ridiculous. (Kris Craig/Providence Journal/Associated Press)

Sorrentino did not respond to requests by Reuters for comment. 

At Sunday's "Yoga Pants Parade," hundreds of people marched past Sorrentino's house holding up signs reading "We wear what we want" and "Love yourself." 

Jamie Burke, 40, who organized the protest, said it had a larger meaning than yoga pants.

"This was not about a bunch of ladies parading around for their right to wear yoga pants," Burke told Reuters. "It was men and women standing up against casual sexism and the policing of women's bodies." 

Sorrentino had a different view of the protesters. 

A woman holds up a sign at a "Yoga Pants Parade" in Barrington, R.I., on Sunday, Oct. 23. (Kris Craig/Providence Journal/Associated Press)

"They should really take a good look at themselves, and do a little introspection and just calm down and leave people alone. If you have got something to say, write it down, and you don't go terrorize people in their home," he told the radio station. 

He said the letter was a satire, but Burke, who said she had invited Sorrentino come along to the parade, said she was not amused. 

"The tone of the letter was just not funny," said Burke, whose husband, children, mother and father accompanied her at
the parade. "I don't believe it — if he was really kidding, he would have joined us."

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