Sunday, April 13, 2008

Methinks the New Israeli Apple Store Isn't Going to Sell This One

We laughed at their ridiculous t-shirts here...

We cried at their offensive shirts here...

I don't even know what to say about this one...

Never a boring day on the #18 bus.

The funny thing is that only two days earlier, my new friend Michal B. told me about this exact shirt. (Ok, the funny thing is that somebody would actually wear this in public.)

My loyal readers, if you see people wearing ridiculous English t-shirts, please send them my way. The pictures, not the people. Unless they want to help pay my arnona.

6 comments:

Ilana said...

Nothing like a little toilet humor to brighten one's day.

:-)

(I still can't believe you didn't think the corn thing was funny. ;-) )

Emah S said...

Even funnier is that he chose to wear his izod shirt underneath so he could display his collar! Not like the weather has called for double layering in Tel Aviv lately!!!

Esther Kustanowitz said...

I know that word is "arnona." But I read it "aroma."

On the airplane to Israel, I saw a shirt under a jacket with only the letters "Castr" sticking out. I wracked my brains as to what it could say: "castrate?" was the best I could come up with, but why that would be on a shirt, I have no idea.

This is before I was aware of the brand name Castro, of course. Do you think it's popular because of Fidel, or because it's the gay area in San Francisco? Who knows.

Darla said...

I don't even think they realise when they are being vulgar. The microchip in the brain does not register. (Same thing happens to them when they drive.) My kids were watching Dora the Explorer a while ago, and the Israeli voice manged to turn "push it" into "poo-shit," and no one ever noticed. Ay ay ay.

Rebecca said...

I love funny tshirts. I also love the awkward moment of seeing something funny and debating whether you should ask the person if you can take a picture of them. Well done, and keep up the picture taking.

eotw said...

Go to "The Guy with the Shirts" (Ha Hu Im HaChultzot) on Ben-Sira st. in Jerusalem. My favorite is the "Hagigat" shirt in the form of the Prigat logo. It always freaks out old people who love Prigat juice/drink. If you need to ask what Hagigat is, well, I can't help you.