Saturday, January 8, 2011

Be Proud In Your Funny Geek T-Shirt!

By Matt Ladd


The rise of the geek is here, my friends! I'm not quite sure when it happened, but it's not so bad to be a geek these days. It may have been when the power geeks from yesterday started graduating college and becoming the entrepreneurs and bosses to the masses. That doesn't really explain why dorky things have become so popular today. Funny geek t-shirts are selling like hotcakes and geek media is being watched all over the Internet.

Now that my funny geek t-shirts are selling well, I have the chance to stop sweating bullets and start thinking about the role of geeks in society today. From the level of sales I've seen recently, there must be other people besides your average nerds who are buying my product. This doesn't just say something about my business, but about the status of dorks in popular culture as a whole.

The years I spent in high school were some of the worst years of my life. Kids can be crueler than any evil dictator, and there were hundreds of them in my school. I took refuge in my comic books and video games. I spent my alone time (and there was a lot of it) learning how to master a computer before many knew anything about them. Can I catch a break for kind of resenting these same types of people who used to prosecute me are now pretending to BE me?

The funny geek t-shirt is trending so popular now because of advents in technology like none have seen before. From the iPhone to Facebook, none of the most popular things the masses use today would be possible without the army of nerds who make it happen and support it. Geek power runs like electricity through America. Time Magazine even named the founder of Facebook as the Person of the Year for 2010. Honestly, there has never been a bigger nerd.

There was a time when wearing your funny geek t-shirt marked you as an outsider. It was a badge of pride that took years to mature into and realize that it was not only okay to be a nerd, but that it made you something special. I embrace the boom in business for my funny geek t-shirt site, but at what cost? Now the jocks and "elites" can buy my product and wear it just to be part of a trend. Is this a good thing, or a terrible thing to happen to nerds everywhere? I'm not sure of the answer to these questions, but I know things will never be the same for me or my fellow geek brothers and sisters.




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