Description
This is a Big Brother Magazine Thrasher parody pullover hoodie that was hand screen printed in the U.S.A. NOT a sublimation or heat press print. NO machines were involved in the printing process of this hoodie. The hoodie is made out of 50% cotton/50% polyester. It features "Big Brother Magazine" designed in the traditional Thrasher Magazine font on the front. The hoodie has no side seams. It has a front pocket. Hood has drawstring. MEASUREMENTS WHILE LAYING FLAT SMALL 20.5in(52cm) pit to pit/24.5in(62.2cm) top to bottom/24.5in(62.2cm) shoulder seam to cuff MEDIUM 22in(55.9cm) pit to pit/26in(66cm) top to bottom/24.5in(62.2cm) shoulder seam to cuff LARGE 23in(58.4cm) pit to pit/27.5in(69.9cm) top to bottom/24.5in(62.2cm) shoulder seam to cuff EXTRA LARGE 25in(63.5cm) pit to pit/28in(71.1cm) top to bottom/24.5in(62.2cm) shoulder seam to cuff Item ships same/next day depending on time ordered on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. Any order after 3pm eastern time Wednesday will ship the following Monday. BACKSTORY: This is one of those designs where if you know, you think to yourself, why didn't this exist before? Alright, so for those that don't know, Big Brother was a skateboard magazine from the early 90s that ran until the early 2000s. Thrasher skateboard magazine has been referred to as "The Bible" in skateboard culture. Well, if Thrasher is the bible, then Big Brother magazine was The Anarchist Cookbook. Big Brother was one of the most "hated" skateboard publications throughout the corporate skateboard industry. Reason being, nothing was off limits in Big Brother magazine. Big Brother is where the world first got its look at Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, and of course Bam Margera and all their self sabotaging stunts. Big Brother magazine thanks to Jeff Tremaine, Johnny Knoxville, and Spike Jonze basically became Jackass the TV Show. Big Brother was well known for always pushing the boundaries of "smart-assery". To the point of annoyance of other industry publications. Which they were well aware of and always let it be known. A good example of this is the Big Brother Magazine issue they released, blatantly using the Thrasher Magazine font on their own cover. See second to last photo in listing. Which brings us to how I got here with this design. Well, long story long, I saw that people were finding my shop by searching for "Big Brother Magazine shirt". Already being aware, there are pretty much no Big Brother shirts around anymore, I figured I had a duty to provide one. I wanted to create a design that embodied the in your face, unapologetic smart ass energy the publication had. Of course, I remember the infamous Thrasher parody cover and my work was basically done. After the mainstream popularity boom over the last several years of Thrasher tees being cool, I feel this design is even better than if it were released during the 90s/2000s era. Do to it's "anti-poser" appeal. Because it's hard to fake what you don't know.