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Archive for February, 2007

Toddler T-Shirt Outrage

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on February 28th, 2007

Fashion house World has been accused of marketing children as "little sexual beings" and grooming them for sexual predators with a T-shirt featuring the slogan "Future Porn Star".

The T-shirt has outraged anti- child abuse campaigners Stop Demand and comes as a new American report says the rising tide of "raunch culture" is starting to affect young girls.

But World designer Francis Hooper is defending the T-shirt saying, "As a fashion designer I’m being humorous and irreverent".

Stop Demand spokewoman Denise Ritchie said the slogan was irresponsible and it was time World grew up.

She said parents should realise that a lot of "creepy" men found such images arousing.

"There are these sorts of creepy individuals in the community and they will be looking at young children wearing these T-shirts, thinking of these sorts of images."

Hooper said if people wanted to take offence he could not stop them but they should look at the T-shirts in context of the whole print line which included the slogans "Parents are Boring" and "I have Issues".

"That one is, of course, the most risque and naughty," Hooper said. "It’s an adult purchase for children."

He said the $45 T-shirts were not necessarily to be worn, but more of a joke gift an auntie would give their niece or nephew.

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http://www.stuff.co.nz/3973677a10.html

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Students Upset with T-Shirts Might Drop Charges

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on February 21st, 2007

By JOSEPH MONTES

The State News

Students upset about a sexually charged T-shirt distributed on campus said they would like to drop charges they filed with university officials if they are permitted to educate the shirtmakers.

A flier advertising the sale of T-shirts bearing the phrase "Wolverines Pack Fudge," accompanied by an explicit cartoon, was distributed on campus in October before the MSU and U-M football game.

Three members of the Respecting Individuals on Neutral Ground, a caucus of the Alliance of Lesbian, Bi, Gay and Transgender Students, went to university officials to have action taken against the students who sold the shirts.

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Super Bowl Loser’s T-Shirts Leave the Country

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on February 6th, 2007

Q: What happens to the Super Bowl champion hats and T-shirts for the team that lost the Super Bowl?

A: The Pittsburgh Steelers ran about the field with hats and T-shirts trumpeting their triumph within minutes of their 21-10 victory over Seattle in Super Bowl XL.

You can buy those same items the next day, which means the items are pre-printed for each team. What happens to the losing team’s merchandise? I think this question crosses the mind of almost every football fan, at some point. There’s an excellent answer.

The NFL donated all Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl Champions merchandise to World Vision, a Christian relief organization that helps more than 70 million people in 92 countries.

"If it turns out to be excess inventory or jerseys with non-existent winners printed, they do donate that product to World Vision," Brenda White said from World Vision’s Pittsburgh office. White is a corporate relations officer with World Vision’s Gifts-in-Kind Department.

Only 45 countries, mostly in Africa, South America and Eastern Europe, are eligible because of various copyright and licensing agreements.

"One of the reasons we work with the NFL and many of the sports leagues and colleges is because they trust us to take it out of the country," White said.

World Vision also works with the National Hockey League under an agreement similar to the NFL. White said the agreement with the NFL has been in place for at least eight years.

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The Way We Wore

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on February 1st, 2007

Our unofficial guide to vintage rock T-shirts

By SIRAN BABAYAN
 
There’s a sense of consumer cluelessness when a young wannabe pop star like Lindsay Lohan is photographed clutching an energy drink fittingly called Rehab and wearing a Queen ’80 tour T-shirt without a trace of irony. First of all, if she can name a Queen song other than “We Will Rock You,” we’ll guarantee Freddie Mercury himself will rise from the dead. Second, she was born in 1986. Welcome to the unrelenting retro retail trend of buying other people’s misty watercolor memories: the vintage rock T-shirt. Unlike the bulkiness of the ’90s, vintage T-shirts with thin collars, as well as baseball jerseys, of the classic rock, metal and punk eras are fitted for a more fashionable look and have a softer, worn-in, comfortable feel. They’re your ticket to hip street cred, like your ’70s shag haircut, ’80s leggings and ’40s rounded-toe pumps. They’re also nostalgic conversation starters. What else says “I listen to blue-eyed Philly soul” like a Hall & Oates H2O tour shirt complete with Whole Oates Enterprises copyright, private eyes be damned?

In Rock Tease: The Golden Years of Rock T-Shirts, one of the many books on the market chronicling the history of this wearable music memorabilia, co-authors Erica Easley and Ed Chalfa trace the popularity of these “time-capsule souvenirs” to the mid-’70s, when Bill Graham started the first music-merchandising company in the coatroom of his Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco. In the ’70s, single and four-color prints and illustrations were simple. In the ’80s, as technology improved, graphics became bolder, and logos, props, scenery, “photo-based images,” and demonic mascots still used by metal bands today grew popular. In the ’90s, it was oversize back-to-basics as grunge and hip-hop took over. Easley and Chalfa have unearthed some real beauts here: an actual royal-purple Deep Purple shirt; a Sex Pistols shirt with the tag on the outside used as promotion for the Never Mind the Bollocks album; and a Canadian shirt of Ozzy Osbourne’s first solo tour oddly displaying a burning cross and KKK imagery, even though he’s never been associated with any hate group. Tease also includes interviews with Richard Hell, who created the infamous “Please Kill Me” shirt that inspired Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain’s punk tome of the same name (though it was worn by Television bandmate Richard Lloyd and not Hell himself), as well as Arturo Vega, the originator of one of the most recognizable works of rock ’n’ roll imagery, as ubiquitous as the Stones’ tongue logo — the Ramones’ presidential seal.

Author Johan Kugelberg “curates” hundreds more of these “symbols of conformist nonconformism,” courtesy of N.Y.’s vintage store What Comes Around Goes Around, in the awesome compendium Vintage Rock T-Shirts (in bookstores February 6). “Cocker Power,” “Wings Over Wembley,” “Slade Alive,” “The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein” — eye-popping, every single one of them. And what Stones fan wouldn’t want to get his sticky fingers on a sweater bearing the Goats Head Soup album, said to be one of only 12 made for the band and their friends? Kugelberg goes the distance by including photographs of artists wearing other artists (Joan Jett in Sex Pistols, Patti Smith in Brian Jones, Iggy in T.Rex); shirts worn by concert-venue staff (Fillmore East, Fillmore West and Max’s Kansas City) and the crew of Showco, the largest touring company in the ’70s; and shirts made by record labels (Debbie Harry’s lipstick smeared on a pink tee to commemorate Blondie signing with Chrysalis). And unlike Tease, Vintage Rock T-Shirts isn’t stingy in the punk department; try finding the Adicts at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium presented by Goldenvoice, or a 1979 bill with the Clash, the Cramps and Dead Kennedys at the mall.

You don’t have to befriend a collector like Chalfa with a stash worth more than $30,000 to buy a piece of yesteryear or its imitation cousin.

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