What we don't heart

POSTED: Thursday, October 8, 2009, 3:30 PM

CP contributor/friend of the Clog Jesse Delaney writes sharing these two T-shirt designs from excellent T-shirt site Philavania.com:

If I see someone wearing this shirt I might have to beat him down on sight.
Such is my disgust with SEPTA.

This one, too.

What say you? Do these threads make yr blood boil?


gijyun
Posted 2009-10-08 13:39:20
Ehrm, re: the SEPTA one, no. It does not make my blood boil. SEPTA is an average-run public transit system. No more, no less. The routes I utilize most regularly (BSL, The EL, trolleys, and the 23, 54, 5, 15, 48, 32, 27 and C buses) are rarely late (except the C. Groan.), and the fares are about average for a city of this size.



With the exception of SEPTA still taking tokens and dragging their feet (kunckles?) to install MetroCard machines, and perhaps the ongoing struggle to find a balance in demand from consumers and influence from their operator union, and maybe their transfer system, for a city of 5+ million people, SEPTA seems to be doing a comparable, if not better, job than other transit authorities of the same size. 



Oh, you want an example? Atlanta's BART system SUUUUUUCKS. Yes, SEPTA is not Boston or DC's metro system, but it'll do just fine. 



p.s. I think the design is nice.

ben
Posted 2009-10-08 15:52:08
If you think SEPTA sucks, you should se other cities, especially Washington DC.

ben
Posted 2009-10-08 15:56:03
the DC metro is great if you live inside the beltway.  If your outside the beltway, do not stay past 7:00pm or you will have no way home.

zoltan
Posted 2009-10-09 10:46:56
The shirt (and SEPTA) are pathetic.

SEPTA imagines that running hybrid diesel buses makes it "green."  Hogwash.  Real electric trolleys can be run with 100% renewable electricity -- cities like Calgary have done this.  But SEPTA refuses to run electrics on trolley lines 23, 29 and 79.  This stinks.  Question for SEPTA:  If hybrid diesel buses are so green, then why is there a three inch wide exhaust stack on the roof?

phillygrrl
Posted 2009-10-09 14:44:23
Design is okay. I'd like to see http://twitter.com/mustloveSEPTA on a T-shirt (designed by Phillyist's _missbee).

Transit Jeff
Posted 2009-10-11 01:08:42
Zoltan hits the nail right on the head. But it's Vancouver, not Calgary that has the large trackless trolley system in Canada, using a hydro-electric generating system to power it. Seattle and San Francisco also have large trackless trolley fleets, powered by a hydro-electric source.
Posted by Brian Howard @ 3:30 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, September 1, 2009, 6:52 PM
adfreak.com
Coulda been worse?

The text at top right reads: "The tsunami killed 100 times more people than 9/11. The planet is brutally powerful. Respect it. Preserve it." (Click here for a larger version.)

David Gianatasio at adfreak.com says of this award-winning World Wildlife Fund ad: "Unfortunately, respect is the main thing lacking here. Exploiting one tragedy to try to prevent another is just stupid and self-defeating, and will always backfire."

I agree. But what are your thoughts? With the eighth anniversary of 9/11 only a week away, is it still too soon to reference the tragedy in order to get us behind a pretty unrelated cause? Or do we need this level of shock value in order to really think about big, important issues? Holler in the comments.

[UPDATE, Wednesday, 8 a.m.]: Thanks for the updates, commenters. Looks like the WWF had nothing to do with this poster, and condemns the Brazilian ad agency that used the organization's logo without their permission. Here's the statement:

"WWF strongly condemns this offensive and tasteless ad and did not authorize its production or publication. It is our understanding that it was a concept offered by an outside advertising agency in Brazil. The concept was summarily rejected by WWF and should never have seen the light of day. It is an unauthorized use of our logo and we are aggressively pursuing action to have it removed from websites where it is being currently featured. We strongly condemn the messages and the images portrayed in this ad. On behalf of WWF, here in the US and around the world, we can promise you this ad does not in any way reflect the thoughts and feelings of the people of our organization."


Drew
Posted 2009-09-01 16:17:38
That's a powerful image, I like it.

Paul Curci
Posted 2009-09-01 17:20:14
Some 40 years after seeing an image of a tear rolling down the face of an old Native American, who'd been canoeing through a trash strewn lake, and I still feel the emotion. Might even be why I never litter. Now, that's powerful creative. This? This is amateurish.... and yes, extremely tasteless. Don Draper would have taken a huge hit of bourbon, and sent these hacks back to the drawing board.

Steve
Posted 2009-09-01 19:19:25
Please update this post.  This is an unauthorized ad and WWF has issued a statement condemning it: http://www.worldwildlife.org/who/media/press/2009/WWFPresitem13540.html

David
Posted 2009-09-01 21:23:52
Hey Carolyn!  How about a little correction here???  http://www.worldwildlife.org/who/media/press/2009/WWFPresitem13540.html  Almost every media outlet has updated this story.  The WWF did NOT authorize this ad. It was a rejected spec that the ad agency submitted to a contest WITHOUT WWF's knowledge.  And before people dumbly follow up with, well, it won an award! It won a MERIT RECOGNITION.  One of seven in that subcategory alone.  There were several hundred awards given out.  Of course WWF wouldn't have found out immediately. Sheesh.  Social media FAILURE. Can you imagine how much money they've lost on this?

Bob
Posted 2009-09-01 22:02:10
Horrible. Disgusting.

sarah yoshida
Posted 2010-03-24 15:46:59
This ad is NOT horrible or disgusting! Yes, 9/11 was horrible and sad! but were the lives lost by the tsunami any less important? a loss of a life is a loss of a life and no matter how it was taken, its terrible and sad! People need to stop taking things so offensively. This ad is just trying to show people how many people were killed.
Posted by Carolyn Huckabay @ 6:52 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
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