Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt
It’s silly, if you ask me. I can see maybe being annoyed if someone makes a big deal about being a Misfits fan, wears his hair dyed black and in a devil’s peak and all that, but really just listens to bands like Green Day and Smashmouth. That seems a bit of a misrepresentation of who they are, an intentional attempt to associate themselves with a lifestyle that they know nothing about. Personally, I still don’t care, but I can understand why some people might. But a shirt is just a shirt. If you define yourself so narrowly that someone else putting on a T-shirt threatens your own personal identity, I think maybe you have more important things to be concerned about than what they are wearing.
Buy this shirt: Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt
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Official Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt
Now this presents a bit of a moral dilemma for me. One the Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt but I will buy this shirt and I will love this one hand, as a previous responder to this question rightly points out, so long as people are buying merch that ultimately helps the band make money and therefore prolongs their career, then that’s a good thing. However, it also makes me seethe inside to see people donning a t-shirt because the logo is cool, and they’re plainly unfamiliar with the band. Okay, before the righteous get their panties in a twist, I know this makes an assumption about those people – of course, who’s to say they’re not ardent fans – but you know when you know, right? Robbie Williams seemed to start this unlikeable trend some years ago when at some awards ceremony he had the chutzpah to wear a vintage-style Motley Crue t-shirt. I didn’t care for him or his music, yet here he was suggesting to the world that he had some familiarity with Motley Crue – a band I love! I felt indignant at the thought that this pop music elf could possibly like Motley Crue and have the chops to carry off wearing a retro Crue shirt with any real brio. I wondered just how many Motley Crue tracks Robbie Williams could name. I was offended by the temerity he displayed – how fucking dare he pose for pictures wearing a Motley Crue t-shirt! I was quite irrational. I suspected that a fashion consultant, through his management company, thought it would be a cute idea to make him seem a little bit edgy or maybe hint at his latent musical tastes, rather than him being seen purely as a pop lightweight (or the fat dancer from Take That).
Buy this shirt: https://famillydesign.com/product/official-movements-merch-crazy-teddy-shirt-2/
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Top Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt
It’s silly, if you ask me. I can see maybe being annoyed if someone makes a big deal about being a Misfits fan, wears his hair dyed black and in a devil’s peak and all that, but really just listens to bands like Green Day and Smashmouth. That seems a bit of a misrepresentation of who they are, an intentional attempt to associate themselves with a lifestyle that they know nothing about. Personally, I still don’t care, but I can understand why some people might. But a shirt is just a shirt. If you define yourself so narrowly that someone else putting on a T-shirt threatens your own personal identity, I think maybe you have more important things to be concerned about than what they are wearing.
Now this presents a bit of a moral dilemma for me. One the Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt but I will buy this shirt and I will love this one hand, as a previous responder to this question rightly points out, so long as people are buying merch that ultimately helps the band make money and therefore prolongs their career, then that’s a good thing. However, it also makes me seethe inside to see people donning a t-shirt because the logo is cool, and they’re plainly unfamiliar with the band. Okay, before the righteous get their panties in a twist, I know this makes an assumption about those people – of course, who’s to say they’re not ardent fans – but you know when you know, right? Robbie Williams seemed to start this unlikeable trend some years ago when at some awards ceremony he had the chutzpah to wear a vintage-style Motley Crue t-shirt. I didn’t care for him or his music, yet here he was suggesting to the world that he had some familiarity with Motley Crue – a band I love! I felt indignant at the thought that this pop music elf could possibly like Motley Crue and have the chops to carry off wearing a retro Crue shirt with any real brio. I wondered just how many Motley Crue tracks Robbie Williams could name. I was offended by the temerity he displayed – how fucking dare he pose for pictures wearing a Motley Crue t-shirt! I was quite irrational. I suspected that a fashion consultant, through his management company, thought it would be a cute idea to make him seem a little bit edgy or maybe hint at his latent musical tastes, rather than him being seen purely as a pop lightweight (or the fat dancer from Take That).
Buy this shirt: Click Here to buy this Official Movements Merch Crazy Teddy Shirt
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