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Makeovers For More Jobs

Toma TasovacDecember 15, 2006

In addition to their lawmaking duties, German politicians may soon have to start working as fashion consultants. Apparently, Germany could solve its economic problems if the unemployed would only get a sense of style.

https://p.dw.com/p/9XVa
A bearded, homeless person sitting on a park bench
If you want a job, the beard will simply have to go!Image: BilderBox

Politics and fashion go hand in hand. During her rise to power, German Chancellor Angela Merkel walked that thorny path that a somber but stern taskmistress has to walk if she is to become a fearsome, opera-attending powerfrau. Along the way, she had her ups and downs, which for a long time translated to moderately good, bad and extremely bad hair days.

Angela Merkel getting her face made up before a TV interview
Angela Merkel worked hard to get her image rightImage: AP

In the end, however, Merkel seems to have found her personal, fashion nirvana in the no-thrills, tailored suits that exude Western confidence and Confucian poise. German fashion designer Wolfgang Joop even dedicated a line of clothing to the German chancellor, inspired by what he called "clear and steely strength in Angela Merkel's eyes."

Politicians -- including Merkel's coalition partner Kurt Beck, head of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) -- know all that. In many ways, fashion does make a man -- or the woman. Yet, until recently, very few politicians would have dared to suggest that Germany's army of unemployed citizens can't find a job simply because they have no sense of style. After all, Germany's economy is usually not thought of as a large-scale Milan runway.

And -- despite what some easy-going US American tourists feel when they are denied entry to a German disco because of their recognizable sneakers and khaki cargo shorts -- fashion police is not an institution officially funded by the German government. Policing fashion is what self-censoring Germans do for fun.

Time to wash up

The SPD's Beck recently unleashed his inner fashion policeman during a visit to a Christmas market in Wiesbaden. A reportedly tipsy Henrico Frank -- a long-haired fan of facial piercing and the unshaven, scruffy look -- approached Beck to vent some frustration.

Kurt Beck holding a speech
Nobody ever complained about Kurt Beck's beardImage: picture-alliance/dpa

"You are responsible for Hartz IV," Frank said, referring to the unpopular set of German labor law reforms. "And I am unemployed!"

What was Beck to do? As a Social Democrat, he had to show that he was close to the people. He couldn't really blame the previous government because he was a part of it. He couldn't hold Frank's hand, get teary-eyed and say how sorry he was, because that would mean admitting defeat. So he decided to give the unemployed of this country some hope.

"If you take a shower and shave, you'll have a job in three weeks," Beck said.

Surprise, surprise

To be perfectly honest, Beck himself is not exactly the best-shaven man on the German political scene. Yet his bohemian stubble clearly did not prevent his rise to power.

Henrico Frank after the makeover
The beard is gone, but the earrings stayed: Henrico FrankImage: AP

Henrico Frank however, in deference to Beck's age, experience and impeccable CV, did exactly what he was told. The 37-year-old went out and got himself a makeover. Then, he called a press conference and presented his new, clean-shaven look on Thursday. And -- probably to the horror of Beck -- the clock started ticking. Will he really have a job in three weeks?

This is the stuff that reality-TV docusoaps are made of. In 2004, one such show -- "The Swan: Finally Beautiful" captivated the imagination of the more depressed portion of Germany's TV viewers.

One can only hope that somebody will come up with the idea of a makeover show in which high-ranking politicians sponsor unemployed candidates and help them get a job. Imagine getting mascara-applying tips from Angela Merkel or dieting advice from Germany's former Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer! Who could possibly fail at a job interview with the help of such stylists?

Forget Milan, Paris and New York. Apparently, Germany is the place where fashion can really change people's lives.