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#84 T-Shirts


tshirt3.jpgMany people and cultures view t-shirts as a simple piece of apparel that can be acquired cheaply and worn in casual situations. For white people, it’s never that easy. The t-shirt is one of the most complex and expressive items in their entire wardrobe.

Your choice of casualwear says a lot about you, and there are stringent rules and hierarchies associated with T-shirts that you must know before venturing into any white-dominated social situations.

T-shirts fall into three categories: vintage, new, and unacceptable, with the latter category compromising the bulk of the world’s supply. Within each category lies another, more precise subset of rules and rankings. Make no mistake, this is complicated.

The most prized t-shirt category is vintage. As shown earlier, white people need authenticity like they need oxygen and to have an original vintage t-shirt from the 1970s or 1980s is a very powerful social status symbol. The ideal shirt will have a funny logo, a year attached to it, and will be as thin as rice paper. In the event that two white people have shirts that meet this criteria, the superior ranking is given to the person who paid the least for the shirt. Acquiring a shirt at a vintage clothing store is seen as less respectable than sorting through racks at the Goodwill.

The second category of t-shirt is new and there really are only two options. The first is American Apparel, a company that constantly reminds you it is based in downtown Los Angeles. They are considered an acceptable white company since they produce things that are very simple, but also very expensive. The second acceptable new shirt is Threadless. This Chicago-based company produces artistic and funny t-shirts that are acceptable for concerts, Whole Foods and 80s night. White people like these shirts so much because they are designed by white people, for white people. Sort of like a white FUBU.

Finally, and perhaps the most important to be aware of, is the unacceptable category of t-shirts. There are a few simple rules to follow in order to avoid wearing the wrong t-shirt. First, if it’s made of a stiff, thick cotton, throw it in the garbage immediately. White people t-shirts must be made of the softest, finest organic cotton. This is law. Unless it is vintage, the shirt cannot be made in a foreign country (unless you can certify its labor conditions). The shirt cannot contain a current sports logo. Shirts with sports logos are acceptable, but they must contain a logo that hasn’t been used in 15 years. Last and not least, it cannot be baggy. Your t-shirt must be tight-fitting for both style and mating purposes.

It is also imperative to understand that faux vintage shirts (”Getting Lucky in Kentucky”) are completely unacceptable. They are beloved by the wrong kind of white people, and must be avoided at all costs.

This information is best applied when you are planning on attending a social gathering. Your t-shirt says a lot about you, and if it’s the right kind of shirt it will set white people at ease. Also, asking a white person “where did you get that shirt?” will allow them to tell you a detailed story about how they acquired it. This will enable them to assert why their shirt has a higher ranking than yours and they won’t view you as a threat.

Never underestimate the importance of t-shirts to white culture. It is an essential tool in determining the social rank, desirability, and value of a white person.


573 Responses to “#84 T-Shirts”

Like your local college t-shirts! Support the teams! Go Devils!

http://devilscountry.wordpress.com/


 
 
 
otherthings on March 7, 2008 at 7:50 am

Oh, white people also like:
The Economist
The New Yorker (this is the most irritating)

You’ve been pretty much right on so far. I didn’t love getting called out on the whole “idea of soccer” thing though!


No offense intended on April 18, 2008 at 2:39 pm

I’m a bit confused.

From what I understand, although their criteria tends to differ, black people like t-shirts (e.g., the “white T” in which they slang in, bang in, etc.) as well, right?


Yes, black people do like t-shirts as well. They are usually urban designers such as Southpole, Sean Jean, Rocwear or etc. Also as you stated, the plain white tee, is the thug’s choice garment. They also have to be very long and baggy.


 
 
 

I used to have a very effective vintage t-shirt from the ‘92 campaign of Dan Quayle and George Bush Senior. It had a huge picture of their faces in the center in red, white and blue ink. It was both ironic and conversational.

Unfortunately, a Democrat Biker (and the wrong kind of white person) didn’t pick up the irony, and threatened me when he saw it. I don’t have it any more.


you’re a pussy.


 

You must’ve had a yeast infection that day…faggot.


 
 

Band merch/t-shirts would also work well, especially zip-up hoodies. My Mastodon zip-up is so cozy…


i guess band shirts would fit under new shirts, though i really think they’re actually a fourth category on their own. there is a whole subset of rules for determining who scores the most scene points for their band shirt at a show. as an added bonus, there is also a built-in heirarchy based on how popular the band is, when they (invariably) sold out, and when in a particular band’s career the shirt was purchased.


 
 

You’re b-a-a-a-a-ck.

“white FUBU” hee hee!


 

Also a major violation…if it has a brand name logo on it. You cannot under any circumstances walk around with a T-Shirt that says ‘Tommy Hillfiger’ on it; that’s how we know not to talk to you.


don’t forget any of the variations of the shirts that display the golden “wit” of the following: “i do whatever the voices in my head tell me.”

i know this person will never be able to move beyond the cultural mire that is hot topic and the rocky horror picture show.


 
 

I Heart White People.


 
 
 

There outta be a “how white are you” online quiz at some point. Perhaps around 100.

Gotta run, my BMW with Apple logo on the back window awaits for my drive to work.


 
 

I once saw a fellow white person stand in front of aber-fi and physically sob at the beauty of a particularly faded T-shirt.

I’m off to IKEA! Later!


I’m white, too! What a small world!
Meet you all at Starbucks!


I’m black, I love Starbucks, BMWs, and IKEA. I don’t really love t-shirts though.


 
 
 

Yes, white people love t-shirts, come on.


 

As an employee of a company that prints organic cotton t-shirts in the United States, I feel that I can, with authority, confirm this entry as 100% true.


Everybody loves t-shirts. Not only as a way yo express themselves. To get dressed for the day they are fast to put on then your ready for the day.
http://www.culturallycool.com


 
 

I am weraing my college t-shirt right now… Gee i hope its ok… maybe i will have to go home and change


another dimwit that can not spell. gee, wonder where our country is headed


Do you know which are my favorite type of blog comments on the whole internet? Those that complain about bad spelling using no punctuation.


CottlestonPie on May 7, 2008 at 2:10 pm

or. orjinallity.


 
 
 
 
 

so being the obviously 100 % white person i am, i immediately had to check out threadless, and what do you know….i DID like it! white people also like to shop online. and dont forget the dare t-shirts!


 

My favorite t shirt is a wilco skull graphic and it’s made from BAMBOO!!


 
la legione di resistenza on March 7, 2008 at 8:02 am

man! “very organic thin t-shirts!” I gotta talk to my roommate! LOL


 

The thin fabric and obsolete sports logo requirements are dead on. Well done sir.

However even an obsolete logo does not usually redeem a sports shirt that says “World/Division Champions 19xx” unless the shirt has other points in its favor, such as different colored sleeves or a faded number on the back.

A thin, obsolete logo sports shirt *from a now-defunct team*, with a number on the back, is near the apex. E.g. a Quebec Nordiques shirt, rice paper thin, with a cracked and barely remaining number stuck on the back.


 

As always, dead on. Except I think that the “vintage” shirt, as you’ve described it, is somewhat on the way out. Unless the irony level is postively through the roof (as in the above gentlemen’s ‘92 Bush shirt) I think most vintage shirts are starting to be seen as a little obvious and gaudy (I think I’d know, I live in Williamsburg!). In the t-shirt realm it seems to mostly be about american apparel type stuff, or other things that are both “very simple, but also very expensive,” as you’ve so aptly characterized it.

Frankly I’m suprised you didn’t comment on that extremely annoying trend of t-shirts with obscure photoshop designs on them, that are considered cool because they’re made by some trendy loser with a Mac, they’re difficult and complicated to acquire, are expensive, and are made in small quantities (thereby making you quite the impressive white person if you’re able to get one).


Are also worn by fag-ass guido types, that tan too long and have too many holes in their jeans.


 
 

-those shirts that say some famous person is your boyfriend.
-”im with stupid”-yeah ya are 100% of the time….look down
-shirts with the outline of a girl wearing a bikini, made for women who should never wear a bikini
-shirts about “awareness”
-shirts displaying your participation in organized competitions (i.e. triathlons, 5ks, etc) even acceptable in their stiff cotton form


 

college t-shirts not ironic enough. too literal, unless you’re moving or painting that day.

gotta run, my prosciutto panini ain’t gonna make itself….


 

i think it’s funny that it’s cool to like wilco now that they’re not classified as country anymore…


 

“…to have an original vintage t-shirt from the 1970s or 1980s is a very powerful social status symbol.”

Haven’t been there, haven’t done that, bought the T-shirt anyway.


 

jajajaja me encanta este blog!


 

You also get the ultimate coolness status if you manage to find a vintage t-shirt with the iron-on logo still in tact. You immiediately win all t-shirt arguments with that.

http://www.platenuts.com


 

They have T shirts saying:

” I’m a white person.

Jealous?”


 

Nicely done. Detailed and nuanced and correct. The razor-thin distinction with the “Lucky in Kentucky” shirts shows you really know what you’re talking about.


 

By the way, you realize that in addition to providing a great service to non-whites you are also helping space aliens infiltrate our planet flawlessly. Thanks a lot, jerks. Well, I guess you gotta laugh. At least until the probings start.


 

don’t forget that any shirts you acquire now can be saved for your children to wear as vintage in 15-25 years!


 

Also a cool t-shirt company: http://www.sixpack.fr …I am not affiliated with them in any way, I swear.


 

Sweet Christ I get such a chickboner when I tell people I got my shit from Goodwill or a vintage store.

But I get MY stuff at a SERIOUS vintage store, where stuff is from the 40s.

Hell yes I am hardcore Caucasian!


Excellent use of the word ‘chickboner’. I hope you don’t mind if I use it.


 
 
 

Eesh. Guilty as charged. Especially since I just got four new Tees at the Warhol Museum on Friday night. (In my defense they did serve bourbon immediately outside the museum’s store entrance.)


 

Made up for #83. Right on.


 

Nuke the Whales T-Shirt - http://www.cafepress.com/evilcarbon.236769957

My Dad’s Greener Than Your Dad T-Shirt - http://www.cafepress.com/evilcarbon.236789272

Global Warming alarmists beware… http://www.EvilCarbon.com


 

Even though the faux-vintage t-shirts are unacceptable, it is perfectly OK to drool over the Snoorg Ts girl.


 

@21: I think they were always accepted by hipsters everywhere. If anything, they’re less acceptable as their popularity has grown.


 
Shannon the Tampa Diva on March 7, 2008 at 8:31 am

according to these lists I have a lot more in common with white people than I realized ( including my metal water bottle) very funny.
The white people in my life really love Ed Hardy, I mean LOVE Ed Hardy clothes.


 

Spot on, again.

To tie these two posts together, apparently highschool memories are so bad that hipsters insist on sporting T-shirts for schools they never went to.

The more obscure (and old) the T, the better.
East Bayside High Wildcats Volleyball? Perfect. Next all you need is a beard, some corduroys, shitty kick, wallet on a chain…and to top it off for extra hipster doofus cred: a brown vintage fedora.


 

I’m a T-shirt junkie and I am black. This site is really making me question my ethnicity. I mean, really.


 

I’m white and these are so true. Ya know what else is true? The world would be better off if every race was not allowed to have children with their own race. Eventually everybody will be brown and racisim will cease to exist. The whole idea is like a vestigial organ in the evolution of a species. We don’t need racial distinctions. I’m sure society will still find a way to divide itself but the color of skin is so lame.

Now back to reality. You’re website made me laugh so much I nearly peed. Just a little.


 

Dude, you’re on VSL today!

This getting way too meta.


 

I would add that white peole love paying $75 dollars for band t-shirts at concerts, that they never wear again after the show.


I kind of relate to this…. I bought a Ben Folds shirt at a concert for about $35, but the only reason why I don’t wear it is because I’m pretty tall, and I’m not a big fan for showing my mid-drift.

On a different note, I own about 40 shirts/sweatshirts from Threadless. I guess when referring to t-shirts, that makes me as white as they come?

They really are conversational pieces. I’ve seen people in elevators wearing Threadless shirts, and we’ve had those awkward elevator conversations about how great Threadless is/how they were better back in the day. Hahaha.

Oh. I also have so many of those Threadless sticker sheets that I hand them out to people like they were business cards.


 
 

This isnt about t-shirts..but in the northwoods of Wisconsin , in the middle of winter, we adults can go to or 24 hr. walmart, only during the night, in our pajamas but they have to be newish pj’s …also must wear a coat or jacket over it. can also wear oldish bedroom slippers- however may not wear pj’s and bedroom slippers together at the same time. and one must walk proud when you are doing that…shows how cozy we are during such tough weather.


 

Apparently the author has not set foot in an urban high school lately. White kids who wear ‘t-shirts’ are dorks. Major Dorks. It’s the African-American students who have the corner market on Cool T-shirts.

I work in one such school. I know these things to be true.

Get in touch, people, get in touch.


diane, that must be a lie because everyone knows white people don’t go to urban high schools unless they are prestigious charter schools that have waiting lists to get in

either that, or they are the wrong kind of white people

also white people love dorks, but they’re called “geeks” not dorks, YOU get in touch


 
 
 

i shoud have added that the pjs should flannel


 

I love the site but i’m a little concerned you are moving to making fun of histers. makeing fun of hipsters is easy, what makes your site funny is that you paint with a broad brush. “the wrong kinds of white people” shouldn’t be vocab on this site.

not that i can tell you how to run your site, but i thought i’d give you some feedback of how things are starting to look from my screen.

good stuff…


 

Once again right on the money!
My white roomies are in goodwill as we speak. rofl!


 

All white people are hipsters?


 

No longer have my classic “AuH2O” T-shirt but somewhere I still have a threadbare one from law school that says ” This is a XXXXLaw School T-Shirt…in three years it turns into a suit!”

Nothing’s as white as a T-shirt …. as long as it’s not a wife-beater.


 

Oh god. This is me with my retro Montreal Expos and Tampa Bay Devil Rays T-shirts. I even have a vintage Atlanta Hawks sweatshirt with the “pacman” logo.


 

I would say that we as black people have an even more structured t-shirt game!

Novelty shirts:

“the man, the legend” is probably the most common black male novelty shirt. Finding a shirt that really demonstrates our wit but maintains our “gangster” is a difficult task.

Expensive black clothing designer:
We will spend upwards to $60 dollars on a t-shirt that is made by puff daddy(sean John), Russel Simmons, and any other up and coming entertainer. I think Usher might be the next artists that we lean toward with his prep boy swagger.

Expensive non-black clothing designer:

This items are a little overboard. Ed harley, Polo, once Tommy Hilfiger; we drop dollars on these brand name items. Although not the focus or desire for the clothing artists market they don’t mind the money that our people spend on these items.

http://www.lullmengesha.com


 

Mesh shirts still live in my closet next to my loveofsports.com t-shirt that is maturing after only 5 months.


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