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John & Paul & Ringo & George

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John & Paul & Ringo & George
DesignerExperimental Jetset
Year2001
TypeT-shirt
MaterialCotton

John & Paul & Ringo & George is a Beatles band T-shirt designed by Dutch graphic design group Experimental Jetset for Japanese label 2K/Gingham in 2001.[1][2]

The piece was designed as an "archetypal band shirt". A few months after releasing the Beatles shirt, Experimental Jetset released a Keith & Mick & Bill & Charlie & Brian version of the design for the Rolling Stones and a Joey & Dee Dee & Johnny & Tommy version for the Ramones.[3]

The original run of T-shirts was popular and the design was quickly adapted and reused by others to reference other bands and groupings.[4][3][2][5] The design was adapted by McDonald's for a television advertisement for the Big Mac that ran during the 87th Academy Awards.[4] It was also used in official political T-shirts for the presidential campaigns of Barack Obama and Donald Trump.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Greenbaum, Hilary (March 22, 2011). "Who Made That T-Shirt?". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2024. Ten years ago, Experimental Jetset, an Amsterdam-based design firm comprising Marieke Stolk, Danny van den Dungen and Erwin Brinkers, sought to design "an archetypal 'band shirt' " for the Japanese label 2K/Gingham. [...] The shirt was popular and eventually sold out, but by 2003, Experimental Jetset started noticing a trend: people were making their own versions of the design and sending images of them back to the design firm.
  2. ^ a b Edgar, Ray (March 3, 2018). "Experimental Jetset exhibition celebrates the 'rock stars' of graphic design". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved February 21, 2024. In 2001 the Dutch graphic design group Experimental Jetset (EJ) produced a Beatles T-shirt. The idea was deceptively simple: replace the faces of the most recognisable band in the world with just their names. After all, everyone knows which band they belong to. The shirt sold surprisingly well. EJ would design two more, listing the Rolling Stones and Ramones. The real success lies not in the number of T-shirts sold, but what they spawned. People began sending them T-shirts in the same format: a plain shirt set in Helvetica type. An ampersand at the end of each line gave the impression the list was a piece of concrete poetry, as much as a pop-cultural tribute. Seventeen years later, the designers still receive band T-shirts with names they've never heard of.
  3. ^ a b c Teague Beckwith, Ryan (August 26, 2016). "How a Beatles T-Shirt From Japan Became the Latest Donald Trump Merchandise". Time. Retrieved February 20, 2024. The original design was stark: "John& Paul& Ringo& George." As the designers explain on their website, the first names were chosen to help strip the band down to its essentials, while the ampersands were added to keep George Harrison's longer first name from standing out too much. [...] the minimalist design was so popular that it soon was ripped off by other T-shirt makers for everything from the Wu-Tang Clan to Nintendo to Star Wars.
  4. ^ a b Bogost, Ian (February 27, 2015). "The End of the Big Mac". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on February 28, 2015. Retrieved February 20, 2024. For those who would recognize it (did you?), the ad also invokes the insider knowledge of a mass-indie fashion meme made popular on the Internet: those Helvetica text t-shirts that list band members or movie characters separated by ampersands and line-breaks. John & Paul & Ringo & George, or Venkman & Stanz & Spengler, for example. The reference allows McDonald's to try (and fail) to borrow the uniform one might wear to a burrito lunch at Chipotle, the name-dropping of band members or Ghostbusters as a side-dish to the name-dropping of fresh, local ingredients.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ Powers, Ann (July 31, 2019). "Bessie& Maybelle& Billie& Marian& Ella& Mary Lou& Celia& Rosetta". NPR. Retrieved February 20, 2024. These days history is carried forward on t-shirts adorned with Helvetica typeface, studded with ampersands. You've seen one, maybe just yesterday, on somebody at the dog park or in the club. [...] Helvetica list t-shirts exemplify the 21st-century impulse to democratize canonization, the process of determining cultural significance. The first acknowledged one, actually reinforced existing hierarchies. Released in 2001 by the graphic design firm Experimental Jetset, it listed John & Paul & Ringo & George, the members of the mainstream's favorite rock band. Almost immediately, people seized the form to argue with the content, asserting their own ideas about who and what should be celebrated, shared and remembered.