With the growing respect for Japanese menswear in the late aughts, Popeye no longer just wanted to introduce readers to the latest global culture. Instead it became an important media resource for creating and celebrating the unique cosmopolitan culture emerging in Tokyo. Under the editorial guidance of frequent The Sartorialist subject Takahiro Kinoshita, Popeye experienced a renaissance in the mid-2010s, with a distinct new aesthetic that put trad-chic fashion set against the city’s iconic mid-century establishments. And by reporting on similar lifestyles around the globe, it seemed like there were truly “city boys” in London, Paris and New York as well. By the late 2010s, Popeye stylist Akio Hasegawa pioneered the “big silhouette” look of loose sweat suits and sportswear that presaged the current wide fits of J.Crew. Kinoshita later left to run Lifewear magazine at UNIQLO among other projects, and Hasegawa currently runs his own brand Cahlumn using Popeye alumni to make its impressive catalog/magazine.
Even today Popeye continues to push a unique Tokyo aesthetic, and the audience has expanded out from young men to older guys, women, and foreign readers (who often can’t even read the texts). Despite the advertisements from major global luxury brands, Popeye has its own sense of how to style such products into a laid-back look using teenage models. There are kids with great style sense walking over to the flower shop in chic gray sweatsuits or enjoying antique ceramics in their tatami rooms while wearing high-end tanktop undershirts. Compared to foreign fashion magazines, Popeye celebrates craftsmanship and urban exploration, especially among older eateries and generation-old shops rather than the latest trendy restaurants.
Popeye, especially as a print magazine, maintains a focus on concrete, analog things—real objects, real places, real people. And this may help ground the magazine in a time of Instagram and TikTok. Even with its social media accounts, Popeye offers an aspirational perspective on living in Tokyo and discovering the wonders hidden around a street corner or finding a great jacket from a small clothing brand. To this day Popeye remains a “magazine for city boys”, and now those city boys are everywhere.