- Nov 15, 2010
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I'd bet good money that there isn't anyone who is offended, and it's just nonsense that has been concocted by the media to make headlines. They have a lot of form at pretending the "woke" want to destroy everything in order to get more eyeballs on their websites.As a side note and don't mean to open up a huge can of worms, but what is the actual contention regarding this is offensive for reasons that it relates to war?
what does Homer car from Simpsons mean?IIRC the 08-10 logo was hastily thrown together as the club felt pressured by chinese sponsors to ditch the Demon logo, was never really supposed to be permanent.
Then we got the Homer car from the Simpsons of logos, truly beffitting that period of our clubs history.
what does Homer car from Simpsons mean?
IIRC the 08-10 logo was hastily thrown together as the club felt pressured by chinese sponsors to ditch the Demon logo, was never really supposed to be permanent.
Then we got the Homer car from the Simpsons of logos, truly beffitting that period of our clubs history.
The car homer designs where he just keeps adding on feature after feature and they end up creating a complete monstrosity.what does Homer car from Simpsons mean?
side note. still have no idea why geelong use the cat head logo as their main logo but on their jumpers and polos etc is the stretching cat logo.View attachment 1717931
As far as official AFL logos go, the StKilda one, which picked up the 1930s version, is slightly older.
One is their club logo, the other their 'on-field' logoside note. still have no idea why geelong use the cat head logo as their main logo but on their jumpers and polos etc is the stretching cat logo.
The stretching cat is so much better.side note. still have no idea why geelong use the cat head logo as their main logo but on their jumpers and polos etc is the stretching cat logo.
That doesn't make any sense to me, but I like your suggestion nonethelessIf Essendon can change it's logo then Port Adelaide should change to the prison bars.
That doesn't make any sense to me, but I like your suggestion nonetheless
100%!The stretching cat is so much better.
I don't disagree, even though I like the current one. There seems to be a massive appetite for the bounding roo to return to the official logo, i'm indifferent but it's a good symbol. i'm fine with the club having dual logos for different contexts, one as a modern sports team logo and one as a traditional football club symbolAlbeit if any club I think needed a rebrand to something more 'traditional' it'd be North Melbourne.
This is actually a good segue to another question around rebrands and that is timing. Recent rebrands for Fremantle, Melbourne and Port Adelaide have coincided with each club's successful patch, with only one of those three being premiers. As for North, there'd be a fear of rebranding too quickly as a fear of tainting a brand, Melbourne being another good example with the 2011-2015 logo being a joke and replaced with the current which coincided with a return to finals and eventually a flag. Hawthorn's rebrand in 2008 is also another example, West Coast too.I don't disagree, even though I like the current one. There seems to be a massive appetite for the bounding roo to return to the official logo, i'm indifferent but it's a good symbol. i'm fine with the club having dual logos for different contexts, one as a modern sports team logo and one as a traditional football club symbol
View attachment 1718579
The issue with this logo is that even reading the name, it isn't clear what it is. The concept i guess is fine, but needs a lot more work to make the standard viewer understand it. The font choice for EFC is also quite poor, as is the gradient border on itView attachment 1717450
This this one from that poll is a little underrated in concept, including the sash in the logo for is just an unnegotiable if I was an Essendon fan. Definitely rather sticking to just "EFC" or "Essendon" rather than include the bombers tag line.
Reminds me of what an update to the Essendon logo around ~07-09 could've looked like, similar to what Melbourne played around with at a similar time.
View attachment 1717458
Yeah completely agree, for the most part I was reposting it due to the Sash+Flying Bomber idea which I'm amazed hasn't come up from the clubThe issue with this logo is that even reading the name, it isn't clear what it is. The concept i guess is fine, but needs a lot more work to make the standard viewer understand it. The font choice for EFC is also quite poor, as is the gradient border on it
I made a thread about something similar a while ago, guernseys that became associated with failure because of when they were worn during a down period, and the opposite, guernseys that become mainstays because the club played well in them. An example of the former would be North's Argentina strip, worn against Geelong and Collingwood during a period where they won all premierships between them, and the latter would be richmond's black sash on yellow clash strip, because it was worn for the 2017 flag.This is actually a good segue to another question around rebrands and that is timing. Recent rebrands for Fremantle, Melbourne and Port Adelaide have coincided with each club's successful patch, with only one of those three being premiers. As for North, there'd be a fear of rebranding too quickly as a fear of tainting a brand, Melbourne being another good example with the 2011-2015 logo being a joke and replaced with the current which coincided with a return to finals and eventually a flag. Hawthorn's rebrand in 2008 is also another example, West Coast too.
With Essendon's resurgence, are they perhaps getting ahead of themselves by wanting to rebrand now as a means of marking a new era, perhaps so. But if you were Essendon, you'd like to ensure that this season isn't an anomaly since more teams have rebranded too suddenly and subsequently see their new brand humiliated by the continued mistakes associated with the former.
As for North, I'd say the best time to rebrand would be when they too start to bound up the ladder. Especially since Tasmania is announced, the Roos ought to firmly establish themselves in the Victorian market and the bounding roo is much loved because of that golden era of the late 90s. Brayshaw oversaw the rebrand back from 'Kangaroos' to North Melbourne so irrespective of how good or bad the rebrand is, timing is another crucial factor.
This case of time is even more prevalent in the NHL and is what made me view rebrands in this light. Ottawa went back to their first logo coinciding with their rebuild as did Arizona. Yet the latter's rebrand backfired and even more doubts surround their future in the desert and the two are probably the yin and yang of rebrand timings in sports.
This is a whole lot of waffle but I think I got an idea for a video essay.