PLACES TO GOCONTENTSAbout MeCONTACTEmail meLINKS I LIKEFresh Yarn The Morning News LAist Defamer Gawker Found Onion Diskant Twine Tour Popbitch MoveOn BLOGS I LIKEARCHIVESMarch 2003April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 August 2004 September 2004 October 2004 November 2004 December 2004 January 2005 February 2005 March 2005 April 2005 May 2005 June 2005 July 2005 August 2005 October 2005 November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2006 July 2006 October 2006 January 2007
| Sunday, July 23, 2006
  NOT QUITE NIKES A few things that have happened since the last time I posted: 1. Suri Cruise was (possibly) born 2. All Hell broke loose in the Middle East (again) 3. I had another birthday (regrettably) Among my birthday gifts this year were a pair of customizable Nike sneakers. Apparently, if you buy a pair of sneakers on their website, you can choose the colors you want for your laces, your interior lining and, naturally, your swoosh. But, more importantly for this story, you can also customize the lettering stitched into the back of the shoe. My friend Matthew correctly guessed that a pair of custom-designed Nikes would be a gift that would put a large, appreciative smile on my face. He even had the perfect words to stitch into the shoes. "Krazy" on the left shoe, "Killa" on the right. Well, it turns out the good folks at Nike have certain standards, and the word "Killa" does not meet said standards. Now, I can totally appreciate a company that doesn't want criminal epithets, sarcastic or not, emblazoned on their footwear. And I doubly appreciate them scanning not just for the word "Killer", but for its abbreviated, hip-hop equivalent as well. Matthew couldn't think of a suitable plan B, so he left it up to me to decide how to personalize my gift. As a result, the present he gave me on my birthday was a picture of some partially-designed sneakers, an amusing story... and, as I saw it, a challenge. When there's stitching to be done, I'm not the kind of guy who can just settle on something like "Jerry Rulz" and go jogging happily on his way. Knowing that Nike was scanning for words it found offensive made me wonder just what one could get away with, and determined to push the boundaries as far as possible with the pair of sneakers that would someday arrive in my mail. Well, as you can guess, when they introduced this service, Nike thought of just about everything people might want to put on its shoes that it would not want to sully the good name of the Swoosh. Like I said... just about everything. After a lot of trial and error on Matthew's and my parts, a lot of head-scratching and a little thinking outside the box, we finally found something that improbably passed muster. And a few weeks later, I received the following shoes in some beautiful Nike packaging... ![]() I admit, when the words first cleared the search engine, I had my misgivings. Maybe this was just silly and immature. Maybe it was a dickish thing to do. Maybe I was taking advantage of a perfectly good promotional gimmick for no other reason than to see if I could. But eventually, I gave into that voice in my head that said, "Just do it." |
THINGS TO DOHEAR, JERRY, HEARCome On Feel The Illinoise/ WATCH, JERRY, WATCHArrested Development READ, JERRY, READBook With Long Title/ THAT'S MY JAM!GOOGLE, JERRY, GOOGLE(My favorite ways that people found this site recently) math movie with black kid why do people in movies have extremely large glasses free christmas party speech for boss why can't people fuck off scared weird little guys "yesterday i saw the day after tomorrow" how long until "sausage goes bad?" "I hate charities" Hall of Fame: How do you draw MC Skat Kat? harmony korine impersonators why people should spread rumors in spanish |