April 22, 2008

Unexpected graffiti in Madison.

Graffiti

Is it ironic? Is it related to the pro-Ron Paul scrawlings I witnessed in the area (State Street)?

ADDED: Is Urban Outfitters putting up its own graffiti? This was on the wall next to the store. On the other side was — in the same chalked block letters — "Urban Outfitters sells 'Voting is for Old People" t-shirts." I think Urban Outfitters-style edginess would support that graffiti, which, to my eye, partakes of the same distanced faux-youthful attitude manifested by the t-shirts it seems to protest. Now, I'm thinking that I'm unwittingly contributing to Urban Outfitters promotion. Is Urban Outfitters getting the jump on me? Oh, no! Maybe I need to spend more time with family and friends.

16 comments:

vet66 said...

These people need a life. Personally, I prefer to leave politics at the curb when I enjoy the company of family and friends.

It is a stretch to equate consciousness with politics. The opposite does not necessarily hold true.

Defacing public property does not bode well for Ron Paul supporters.

rhhardin said...

It's not Ron Paul handwriting.

tituswantsababy said...

Urban Outfitters clothes are stupid.

Their tshirts are particularly awful.

Their shoes are awful too.

When I was home in Wisconsin I went up by the Dells and Baraboo and there were all kinds of Ron Paul scrawlings on barns, billboards and stuff like that.

Madison thinks it is so cool but it really isn't.

They only have 3 gay bars-not enough for a city that size. Also the gay selection is poor.

tituswantsababy said...

Providence RI has about 50,000 less people than Madison and they have like 8-9 gay bars-not that's a cute small city. Also, Providence has tons of strip joints both gay and straight. Also, they have Brown and RISD which is a little more fabulous than UW and MATC.

MadisonMan said...

I agree that RISD is fabulous. Their museum is just awesome, and the John Brown House is breathtaking. The best haircutter I ever patronized (Hi Sandy!) worked in Providence.

I recall that Urban Outfitters' CEO or something like that is a big supporter of the former Senator Santorum, so I don't patronize it. UO reminds me of the Peoples' Nation, but no one posting here will recall this store from the early 70s in my hometown.

tituswantsababy said...

You are correct MadisonMan:

"While the typical Urban Outfitters shopper is likely to be liberal-minded--as is the province and privilege of youth--the fiftysomething Hayne is mom-and-apple-pie conservative. He and his wife Margaret have contributed $13,150 to the campaign coffers of Paleolithic right-wing Republican Sen. Rick Santorum and his Political Action Committee over the years."

Another reason to hate the store.

MadisonMan said...

UO strikes me as the kind of store Bill Ayers would have patronized back in the 60s. The Up Yours vibe that is carefully calculated to cash in on young adults rebelling against their underwriters, er, parents.

George M. Spencer said...

Comrades, please to be heightening consciousness with Jim, Margaret, Bud, Princess, KItten...here and here.

Original Mike said...

I rarely go down on State Street anymore, and I had no clue where Urban Outfitters was, but I immediately recognized that brown brick wall with the fire hose attachments. I guess I did walk past it every day 20 - 30 years ago, but I still find it surprising that I immediately knew where it was. It's funny how the brain works.

KCFleming said...

UO's high-end faux-counter-culture is both calculated and corporate.

It spells Jane Fonda workout videos or Jerry Rubin pushing his Amway-styled-distribution for the powdered nutritional drink WOW (with bee pollen and ginseng!). Or Che! t-shirts at any price.

Ugh.

former law student said...

Urban Outfitters pulled the whimsical Yale grads shirts back in 2004 -- are they back?
http://www.vintagevantage.com/dallasnews.html

UO strikes me as the kind of store Bill Ayers would have patronized back in the 60s.

Urban Outfitters is designed to appeal to the Hot Topic demographic as they age out of junior high but before they hit Anthropologie. Once dragged into one by my niece, the only thing I considered buying was a box of highly ironic Cheesy Poofs.

60s radicals would not patronize self-consciously hip chain stores. The hippie demographic shopped at surplus stores and head shops.

tituswantsababy said...

Anthropolgie and Urban are owned by the same man.

vbspurs said...

Hollister >>> Urban Outfitters.

Cheers,
Victoria

Chip Ahoy said...

Ha ha, used the bricks as guide lines for carefully spaced script. Now that's graffiti for you.

Dustin said...

I don't know if its still there, but I found the statement "We All Die Alone" that was also chalked on that building a few days ago rather amusing. I don't know that I should find a statement like that amusing, but I did.

John Kindley said...

"On the other side was — in the same chalked block letters — "Urban Outfitters sells 'Voting is for Old People" t-shirts." I think Urban Outfitters-style edginess would support that graffiti, which, to my eye, partakes of the same distanced faux-youthful attitude manifested by the t-shirts it seems to protest."

It's FAUX-youthful because in fact old people if they've learned anything should know by now that voting is stupid. Young innocents are the ones more likely to be deluded into thinking their vote matters.

I assume that's what you were trying to say.