Shoe tossing is one of those strange urban phenomena where no one ever sees the act but everyone can see the results: A perfectly good pair of kicks, tied together by the laces and strung up on a telephone or electric wire.
It could be kids throwing their own sneakers up to commemorate a big event or tossing others' shoes to punk them. Some legends claim the shoes in certain neighborhoods designate a crack house (leading to the nickname "crack tennies") or as gang territory markers, with some saying they commemorate gang murders.
Which is why I was particularly dumbfounded to discover a lone pair hanging over the intersection of Shepherd Drive and West Gray by the River Oaks Shopping Center. But these are not just any sneaks—they're covered in sparkly silver sequins.
Sure, they may be part of an underground public art project, like the knit graffiti by Knitta Please that popped up all over Montrose a couple years ago.
But I like to imagine it's all part of a turf war between the YSLobos and the Gucci Mafia.