^Heck, if a tough guy like Charles Napier could get away with wearing pink in a '70s TV episode, then the pink Kzinti uniforms from the same decade probably weren't seen as odd.
I mean, heck, the '70s were the time when traditional assumptions about masculine behavior began to change and men were given more freedom to be emotional and vulnerable and not have to be tough and macho and insecure about their strength all the time. The masculine ideal in the '70s was Hawkeye Pierce, a compassionate and empathetic pacifist who wasn't afraid to show his feelings. To say a man was in touch with his "feminine side" was a compliment back then. Then in the '80s, the decade of Rambo, the old macho mentality resurged and the emotional maturity of American men regressed sharply, and it's only gotten worse since then.
I mean, heck, the '70s were the time when traditional assumptions about masculine behavior began to change and men were given more freedom to be emotional and vulnerable and not have to be tough and macho and insecure about their strength all the time. The masculine ideal in the '70s was Hawkeye Pierce, a compassionate and empathetic pacifist who wasn't afraid to show his feelings. To say a man was in touch with his "feminine side" was a compliment back then. Then in the '80s, the decade of Rambo, the old macho mentality resurged and the emotional maturity of American men regressed sharply, and it's only gotten worse since then.