{"id":167,"date":"2007-10-13T11:10:57","date_gmt":"2007-10-13T18:10:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2007\/10\/13\/goddamnit-stop-wearing-stupid-slogan-shirts\/"},"modified":"2007-10-13T11:10:57","modified_gmt":"2007-10-13T18:10:57","slug":"goddamnit-stop-wearing-stupid-slogan-shirts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2007\/10\/13\/goddamnit-stop-wearing-stupid-slogan-shirts\/","title":{"rendered":"GODDAMNIT: Stop Wearing Stupid Slogan Shirts"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Anthony Burch<\/a><\/p>\n Quick – what’s the quickest, easiest way to make a person you’ve just met hate you with the fire of a thousand suns? Why, wear a t-shirt with a banal, pointless slogan on it, of course! Not the funny, ironic, quasi-offensive stuff you might find at Snorg, BustedTees, or T-Shirt Hell, mind you, but the sort of pathetic, pointless crap which embarrasses not only the shirt-wearer, but everyone who has to come into contact with him. Here’s why you shouldn’t wear crap like that.<\/p>\n First off, the shirts aren’t fucking funny. Period. Never have been, never will be. Most of these shirts contain either stupid, dated catchphrases (I once actually saw someone with a shirt reading, “Houston, we have a problem”), or absurdly out-of-style slang (“Don’t hate the playa, hate the game”). It’s one thing to wear a shirt with a cool symbol or idea like, say, Viva La Stewart<\/a>. It’s another to wear something which will become dated and unfunny roughly two weeks after you’ve bought it. Will Ferrell fans: I hate to break it to you, but your “I LOVE LAMP” shirt isn’t even remotely grin-inducing anymore.<\/p>\n We’ve all seen the movies, we all get the catchphrases — simply wearing words taken from a film or song do not make you as clever as the people who originally came up with them. Okay, great: you really liked Superbad<\/em>. So did I. But wearing a shirt that reads, “I am McLovin” doesn’t really mean<\/em> anything, does it? Wearing a catchphrase from a great movie does indeed signal to your peers that you’ve seen and enjoyed a film which everyone and their goddamn mother has seen and enjoyed, but it also says that you aren’t original enough to come up with things of your own to say. Now, I’m not suggesting we all go out and make our own t-shirts (though Cafepress<\/a> does exist for a reason), but wearing a shirt with a film quote which will get old in less than a few months just seems an exercise in futility. If you’re going to cover your torso with something people will either find irritating or wholly irrelevant within ten weeks of your purchasing it, you’d be better off just wearing a blank shirt.<\/p>\n Disregarding film quotes, though, there’s always the ridiculous shirts which include culturally devoid sayings which somehow manage to be smarmy and pretentious whilst simultaneously appealing to the lowest common denominator. For example:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n