I posted in the thread in the Doves Head ("Funny hats and wacky waistcoats

" ) and I'd like to expand on it here. I've been learning magic for about a year and a half now and obviously don't have much experience, but I can offer the view of someone who was a layman up until fairly recently.
I think a lot of the magic dislike come from the way many magicians present themselves (i.e. the way they look) and a lot of the magicians I saw on 'Britain's Got Talent" only seemed to confirm it. I can't believe that in 2007, magicians still think it's a good idea to wear a 'zany' hat, multi coloured waistcoat and comedy bow tie. There's the old saying, first impressions count...in this day and age no one will take you seriously if you look like the third Chuckle Brother! Every other aspect of entertainment has moved on, why does magic have such a hard time doing so?
Then there's the 'cool' magicians who are anything but. Unless you're Samuel L Jackson, an ankle length leather jacket isn't going to look good on you. Be aware of how you appear to other people, if you're not a naturally stylish person then don't try to be because you won't fool anyone. Take what you have and work with that, expand on your personality rather than trying to make up a completely different one.
To the layman there's an air of cheesiness around magic and many magicians don't do a lot to change that opinion. Look who's famous; Blaine, Derren, Dynamo to a certain degree...what they all have in common is they don't look like the public perception of a magician. No top hats, no magic wands, no wacky outfits. Now since I've started to study magic I know there are magicians who don't fit the stereotype (Sankey, Harris, Sanders) but they're generally unknown the to public at large. Imagine if Sankey had walked onto the stage in front of Simon Cowell. He might have hated his act, he might not, but the fact the he doesn't look like a 'magician' would have done away with any preconceived notions Cowell might have had.
In a just world none of this would matter but we live in extremely shallow, image driven times. It's not fair but it's the way it is. If you're a magician, and you've got leather pants, a billowing white shirt and a platinum blonde, blow dried mullet you can't really expect to appeal to todays audience.