I see more gimmicks instead of real controversy triggers in many of the stories that were supposed to create shock during the decade. Lots of them only combined already played-out themes with only a timid dash of grotesqueness. Homosexuality, Catholicism, sex, the black and white racial theme.. they all seem like the recurrent, forbidden topics that must've culturally and morally challenged your grandparents in the 70s, 80s.. even if many survivor of these years are still alive now, I don't think fashion has truly had the guts to address topics that people are sensitive to NOW. I mean, have we seen a story of same-gender parents raising a kid in any of the publications that take pride on being 'radical'?, how about the current migration in Europe or the US, a topic that's even uncomfortable and hard to accept to all those self-proclaimed controversy lovers of fashion daring stories?.
I don't know.. maybe I expect too much but I think fashion's need for controversy can be interesting if it has some sort of mission, or real guts and if it touches a topic that people tend to shudder about.. controversy for the sake of a chuckle can hardly be that.. controversial.