Skinny jeans are hip though not considered to be healthy, but they have bounced back into the limelight for another reason--because they seem to bend iPhone 6. Some users of Apple's mobiles feel that skinny jeans and cells don't get along like a house on fire and they complain that it makes the latest phone look like a bad Apple. But some others counter that the bending is only for a few users.

Some experts feel that they do not really lower the sperm count, but others still assert that they do. However, skinny jeans are seen to twist the testicles and give you urinary tract infections, bladder weakness and fungal infections, according to Daily Mail. Isn't that a rather worrying threat to humanity?Leave some space in your groin area, doctors advise.

It is noticed that such jeans make it tough to bend and tie shoelaces or buckle shoes. So there were some research on these strangely popular pants in the past five years.

They are also discovered to be anti-wallet and anti-bicycle. With little space to shove the wallet or the credit-card holder into his hip, a man can probably lose his items or get pick-pocketed.

Though they are called "skinny," the jeans do not really support skinny legs. This is worrying for those who have "knobbly knees," because they tend to show quickly. Pedalling bicycles is also difficult. If you just throw caution to the winds and pedal anyway, you will find to your peril at the end of the tour that your jeans are baggy, shapeless or torn. That is why skinny jeans also "hate cycling and cyclists."

Wear skinny jeans and resign yourself to one advantage--a straight posture. But only for a while, after that you become stiff. After more time, you become pained and suffering. Be grateful that you at least haven't got a stroke, a fracture or bent back and if you have tried to pick up items on the floor or tie your laces and wear socks and shoes.

Finally, some people have just resigned themselves to the eccentric habits of the jeans. "Skinny jeans mean the days of getting undressed gracefully are gone," says Adam Gabgatt, in The Guardian. "Skinny jeans have won."