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Monday, August 22, 2005

Special Report 1: Evil and the Logo

Evil and the Logo: The Illuminati, Satan, and the Hapless Designer

As it would be irresponsible of me to write any of my past logo reviews without also factoring in the brand itself, it would likewise be irresponsible not to at least touch upon some of the symbology that often goes into trying to ascribe greater meaning to the highly compressed artform of the logo. So here's the first in a series of peeks into the world of logos, icons, and symbology.

Jeff Halmos, August 2005



Overview
The world is of course completely controlled by a select few who belong to an elite, faceless band of lizards capable of morphing into human form. Or, maybe not. Regardless, there's an evil wind that, now and then, washes over a designer's artboard and magically transforms mere circles and triangles into minions of nasty ancient cultures and darkly grinning despots. It is also quite possible that there is an ancient brotherhood of logo designers who've been propagating these symbols upon unwitting corporate and political leaders for thousands of years for their own insidious pleasure. You decide...


Note: Star ratings are based on the designers' presumed level of compliance with ancient evil cults (The Illuminati, Freemasonry, The Mysteries, The Rat Pack), along with the degree of evil that dripped from their mechanical pens.

The designers' were obviously morphing lizards themselves

They wore the funny hats, but weren't allowed in the back room

Posers

Might have just been neighbors of morphing lizards

Hapless; have never seen Being There or Snow White



1) Illuminati/Freemasonry
Freemasonry is supposedly a secret society that has supposedly been around since the Pyramids.
The Illuminati is supposedly a secret society within that secret society, and the Illuminati supposedly controls everything. in that awkward moment when you find yourself picking up a spoon instead of a fork, look around.


THE ALL SEEING EYE
The Eye of Providence. Eye of Mind. Eye of Horus. The Eye of Sirius. The Trinacria. Classic stuff. Supposedly, Sirius is the Egyptian's version of Satan (isn't Harry Potter's godfather called Sirius Black? Hmm).










CBS: Who's watching whom? This is the slam-dunk reference for the eye thing. If you stare at it long enough, it will blink.
AOL: You've seen that glazed-over look on AOL subscribers, haven't you? Oh, and what's that, a pyramid?
TimeWarner: Are you kidding me?!


THE PYRAMID
Pyramid power. Supposedly the Freemasons are the original builders of the Pyramids. And if the
capstone is missing, look out! One apex, two shapes, three triangles, four sides, five points. Oh, I'm tellin' ya!








Chrysler: A pyramid squaredance. And just to rub it in, there's a conspiring combo of a pentagram and a pentagon. Pure evil!
Nabisco: Pfff. Nice try.

Fidelity: Sneaky. Trying to hide behind the US $1 bill, but that sunburst behind it is, well, read on...


THE RISING SUN
Back when the original Masons formed, some 3500 years ago so it goes, the sun was everything. And everything was based around its cycles. Even the Gregorian calendar is supposedly based around the sun's cycles (2000 was to be a huge year for sun bursts and the incredible energy release that fnord comes from them, so they reverse-engineered the calendar). The rising sun also
can be read as "the rising son." The darkest day of the year is the Equinox, around December 21 or so. A few days later the sun/son rises again. Incidentally, Christ has no monopoly on this day. Egyptians celebrated the birth of Horus, son of Isis around the 25th. Buddha, son of Maya, was said to be born on the 25th. The Persian's Mithras, son of god, Osiris, son of the Holy Virgin, Hercules, son of Zeus, and the Scandinavian's Freyr, son of Odin, all celebrating birthdays on the 25th of December.








NBC: Very, very sneaky. But not sneaky enough...Busted!

Shell: Another sneaky one. Quite lovely, really. Bloody lizards! (Texas has its own separate power grid).
Adage: Not sneaky. Actually, rather in-yer-face, I'd say. Pyramid and all.


THE TORCH
Signifies illumination of The Ancient Mysteries (The Eleusinian mysteries; The Dionysian mysteries;
Isis/Osiris). The Mysteries is mostly whack Egyptian stuff, all secrecy and religiosity, the main gist being eternal life. And eating your enemy. And orgies.








American Heart Association: I just like the image of the heart being stabbed by a flaming dagger. One star off for the simple hope that the AHA isn't evil. But it's probably all...in vein.
Standard: Fire and oil don't mix well. (The US is currently run by Texans).

Better business Bureau: Looks more like a paintbrush. Perhaps for whitewashing.




2) The Occult
A catchall ph
rase for messing around with nature and hiding the results from everyone who wasn't invited to the party. Some are Satanists, others just like the hats and not needing the service of airports to get around. Occults live and die on symbolism. For all we know streetlights could be telling them where the next amphibian-sponsored sacrifice will be held.


THE PENTAGRAM

The Endless Knot. The Goblin's Cross. The Pentalpha. The Witch's
Foot. The Devil's Star. Supposedly the pentagram in its upside-down form is a symbol of witchcraft, and evil in general. Upside-down, it's also the symbol for the horned god of Celtic paganism, and the US Medal of Honor. Because it can be drawn with a single line, leaving no opening or "gate," it has been held in many cultures to have special powers. I know. I know. It's nuts. But what can you do?








Texaco: The morphing lizards are using the liquefied remains of their ancestors to fuel their most evil and ingenious invention. Cannibals! And hey, isn't that a Freemason's T-square? (Texas is the "lone star" state).
Prodigy: Revealing the single line nature of this complex symbol, this thing is flat-out in-yer-face nastiness.
Converse: Nope, not this one. Oh! But wait..."converse"...what...what would be the converse of the star in their logo?...Yes, an upside-down pentagram! Run for your lives! (In Nike sneakers, of course).


THE PHOENIX
The Phoenix sets itself on fire when it just can't take it anymore, then magickally appears from its own ashes, and as such, represents a new beginning, or being born again. Oddly, the Phoenix has the same meaning across all cultures, cults, and groups. Odd, because the bird was never more
than a mythical creature. Tough to find a feat with legs like that on this planet for any image or idea. It's an evil symbol, usually representing Satan and his whole fire thing. Oddly, the bald eagle looks a lot like the Phoenix, and there's good or bad meaning depending on whether the head's pointing to the left or right. Look for the "Hilary Pin" which, oddly, Ms Clinton and other female elite wear with pride in public—the head, oddly, facing to the left (the bad one).








Barclays Bank: That, my friends, is a bloody Phoenix. And Phoenixes are evil. And so are banks. And crowns are too, probably.
Georgio Armani: There are no eagles in Italy (OK, there's the small toed eagle, but, c'mon). Plus, isn't that really just an upside-down pyramid with the capstone missing?
Budweiser: That long neck (the logo; not the bottle). That's not an eagle's neck. It's a Phoenix's neck. Beer companies are as evil as it gets. Other than banks. And oil companies. And Texas.


THE "LADY"
The Egyptian Mothe
r Goddess. Goddess Isis. Creatrix. The Destroyer. Symbolizes the "Lady," Goddess of the Wicca. There is of course a Lord, too, and they both rule the religion of Wicca, which tends to have both benign and evil definitions, depending on the weather.









LucasArts: Let's load up on this one, since it's the evil George Lucas we're talking about (Joseph Campbell, notwithstanding). We have the Lady, the All Seeing Eye, the Rising Sun, and, and...that "whatareyougonnadoaboutit" attitude.
National Film Board of Canada: Ya, they're trying to hide the fact by moving it out of the box, but that's a Lady and the All Seeing Eye alright. Busted!
Sturm, Ruger and Co.: America's largest firearms manufacturer. Look at this thing: a Phoenix Bird doing the Lady pose. What more could you ask for?


THE OUROBOROS
Greek. Means "tail swallower." Always a serpent or a dragon, forming a circle by biting its tail (dogs try it, but can't). It's been around since about 2000 BC and represents the cyclical nature of the universe. Snakes usually get the resurrection gig because of the skin shedding trick. Often used to
represent Lucifer, the Ouroboros usually surrounds symbols that are equally ill tempered.








Lucent: Lucent. Lucifer. Same difference. Any way you slice it, it's a snake eating its damn tale. Of course, it could just be an Enso, the Zen symbol for Satori, but then the movie would be over and we'd still have half a bag of popcorn.
Intel Inside: Your PC crashes all the time because Satan is inside. It's a cyclical thing; crash, restart, crash, restart, crash...
Bell Canada: This logo wants to be evil. No doubt. But it's Canadian. It's not biting its tale. It's licking it.


THE OWL

The owl is almost universally known to be a symbol of knowledge (kn-OWL-edge) and is connected with Athena (or Minerva), as well as the occult and shamanism. A famously patient bird of the night, it's also known as Moloch, the god to which who's statue children were burned at the foot of, all in good fun of course. Supposedly, all the bigshots gather at the Bohemian Grove Club once a year in
California to do evil in front of a huge stone owl. There's a tiny owl on the face of the US $1 bill, and the Washington Capital is surrounded by roads that outline the shape of an owl.







Hooters: Nothing associated with breasts could ever be evil.

One World Language Schools: "One World"?! You're kiddin' me, right? Keep your children far, far away from this school.
Bohemian Grove Club: Very 1930s Germany. It's not just a logo; it's a big damn statue. With human blood on its claws.




3) The Hapless Designer

Even with all this sweet nectar of pure evil running amuck in the corporate world, there are still logo designers around the world who haven't been able to properly channel this generous power. To wit...


THE MISSED OPPORTUNITY

So much evil. So little inspiration. Note to designers: When you get a client that comes to you with a company name like "Hell," you put some damn horns or flame on it somewhere! There are simply no excuses. Geez!









Hell: Hell-vetica. The anti-font. But that's as evil as this one gets. An extra star for the name at least.
Microsoft: Remember, those stars are for the designers; not the company. But we all know Microsoft is the most evil of all. It just doesn't appear that M$ was willing to let on. Maybe there's a Pyramid there between the "O" and the "S." But a weak attempt overall at black-hatting the logo to be sure. Utterly disappointing.
Diebold: The vote fixers. They prefer to be called "DEE-bold." But we know better. And that innocuous swoosh. C'mon. A spade's a spade. Where's the pentagram? The pyramid?


THE ALSO-RAN

Not quite posers. More like "missed opportunities" with a dash of "I want to be a dentist" thrown in for good measure. We'll stick with the good ol' Pyramid for this one.








Advantage Rent-A-Car: Oh, I don't know. I mean, it's got the pyramid with the capstone missing, and it's got the makings of a pentagram, but the whole thing is done with such a lack of aplomb that I'm just not convinced.
Thyssen: A kinder, gentler Pyramid.

Fire Sentry: All Seeing Eye inside a Pyramid? Nah. It's a freakin' circle inside a triangle (I'm just not feeling it, ya know?...Well, maybe).


THE EVIL-IN-WAITING

Some logos start to take on a life of their own, and just look evil either by taking it out of context, or simply crappy design.









Taylor Made: A girl in a bikini from the front. A guy in a thong from the back. A martini glass. This logo has always bugged me. And I don't know why. So it must be evil.
Omnimark Technologies: I don't know what the hell this thing is, but it's a philosopher's stone throw from the big leagues.
Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries: Kind of a combination of a Janus, an Ouroboros, and an All Seeing Eye, with a little bit of Chanel thrown in.



Important life-preserving Disclaimer:
Most of this was found on the Web and was either made up, dead on, or flat-out wrong.



Wednesday, July 20, 2005

ABC | Gateway | CA & Radioshack

THE GREAT: ABC



Yes. Five stars. It's perfect. Influential. Paul Rand. OK, ya, it's a little dull.











What's really interesting though is that there's a brilliant little trick this logo incorporates in order to make it visually perfect rather than mathematically: the large circle isn't round. It's slightly squished top to bottom. Incidentally, the logo I lifted from the ABC website uses a perfectly round circle. Genius is fleeting.


Is it dated? Maybe. But it's American and European and glyphic all at the same time, which is tough to pull off even today.




ABC is not well branded for anything in particular. They're still one of the Big Three. Which is all they can really claim.

8 out of 10




THE LAME:
Gateway




Oh no. Not again. This company is now officially off my Chirstmas list.













In 2003 we had the very smart, very memorable evolution of the ever-ADHD Gateway brand, the one using the "On" symbol (a ship entering a port) found on most computers and many electronic devices, and turned on its side to represent the letter "G." It was eight months in the making, and built on the many Gateway logos and names over its short history, perfectly incorporating the cow spots into a more contemporary, less kitschy bug. And while the wordmark looked to be an off-the-shelf font, it fit the new sparse look of the website and the subtle geometry of the new logo. Then of course they dropped the bug after about eight months or so and just went with the wordmark.

Next!


Now in 2005, we have this latest installme...you know what?...forget it. Forget this one. Forget their Jersey cow spots. Forget their boxes. Their logo changes. Their name changes.

And I'm boycotting milk.





Really an also-ran in the biz, with not much more to add to the story of the PC than the PR they got right away with the cows and their factory. Points off for the instantly dated original name ("Gateway 2000") revealing their lowbrow roots. They briefly moved into the consumer electronics biz, but are now back to selling PCs.

4 out of 10




THE VILE: It's a tie!—Computer Associates & RadioShack



These are both equally terrible logos. Computer Associates (how's that for an exciting, unique name?) basically mirrors their name with a Helvetica look-alike, and RadioShack kills their interesting name with a stunning display of lameness with that bug.







There is nothing happening in either logo. The thin circle used in both bugs creates a weak overall feel, and the letterforms add little to their story.

The only saving grace, for RadioShack, is if the circle with the displaced "R" is actually a universal electronics symbol of some sort.




RadioShack has fallen from grace over the years (the Canadian stores are now branded as The Source via Circuit City) and CA had a brief love-in with TV commericals.

2 out of 10

Sunday, July 03, 2005

McDonalds | Nike | NPR

THE GREAT: McDonald's



Simple and direct. The "golden arches" are now built into every child's DNA so much so that McDonald's could go commando with the bug. But even the wordmark could live on its own with its treatment of the x-height in relationship to the caps, and the familiarity of the word itself.










However, even more powerful is the sign version. I'd go with that exclusively. It is, after all, the restaurant experience (if you like hard plastic seats and the constant beep of the machines behind the counter) that we are truly worshipping.




What the hell is MuckDonald's doing? You sell hamburgers!...they're not healthy...but you own that! They've now got veggie burgers, fish, chicken, salads, and pizza for god's sake (nice logo though). What on Earth does McDonald's mean to anyone anymore? (Oh, right...TOYS!).


They tried for the New Coke strategy, almost changing the oil they use in their fries in order to get the fat down, but it was going to be a case Fries Classic since they were supposedly going to taste quite differently. They've also simplified the menu because of the backlash from the documentary Super Size Me.

That's it! I'm taking another star off.

7 out of 10



THE LAME: Nike



If you haven't already heard the story of the young girl in college who sold her design for $70 or so to a small shoe company, well then, what do you think that is tattooed on your forehead? Billions of dollars in advertising and marketing has assured that that swoosh stays right there, a few inches above your brow.







Which is how it's supposed to be, really. And why it makes it pointless now to actually judge this bug on its graphical merits. Which, truthfully, are little; it's a poorly balanced form with no meaning. But it does have an obvious energy to it.





It's those billions of dollars, however, that has done this logo proud. After all, a symbol only has meaning if it is perceived to have meaning. The simpler the design the better.


The power of the Nike brand is such that with all the jacking around over the last ten years or so that Nike has done with their logo, the value of the brand, and the illusion that Nike actually makes things, has for the mostly part been maintained.


But Nike had sustained damage for all that logo play and experimentation, and paved the way for companies like Adidas, with their famous three stripes, identifiable at 1000 paces; unlike the intimacy required to identify the hidden bug Nike slips under the shade of a baseball cap, or the waist of a tucked in t-shirt.

6 out of 10



THE VILE: NPR




Mildly interesting for it's odd color combo, this logo strives to achieve mediocrity. When compared to the previous logo, one can see how uniqueness and meaning were stripped out.







From what appears to be sound waves emanating from uppercase letters, it's devolved into lowercase letters framed by simple colorfields. And the "p" just doesn't work within the square it was given.




The conspiracy kids call NPR "national public relations." The appeal, if any, is that there's no appeal. You're really not supposed to take notice at all.

Does all this mean, then, that the logo and brand are successful, and should merit more stars?

Nah.

3 out of 10

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Moen | IKEA | Epson

THE GREAT: Moen



A great, smart, memorable bug. Weakened by an over-sized wordmark. In the past, the proportions were better balance.










Basically, it's the letter "M" formed by two water drops, representing hot and cold. Perfect, simple lines.





Moen is a strong brand with a short, memorable name. Moen stands for quality, innovation, and style.

7 out of 10




THE LAME: IKEA




Bland and without flare. some ownership to the wordmark characters, but I believe it's an off the shelf font. (A reader noted that the colors are the same as Sweden's flag).









The unique, short name rises above the bland design, and the quality of the store designs and marketing have always overshadowed the logo.

6 out of 10



THE VILE: Epson





Yes, that's right; no stars. The anti-font—the dreaded Helvetica—with overly tight kerning, and nothing else.





Points off for choosing a color their own printers can't reproduce. Bonus points off for choosing a font that comes imbedded into every printer on the planet.




The name is unique. Dull, but unique. Epson is low- to mid-quality. Recent product designs and technologies suggest a strong move upwards (professional photographers now use their top-of-the-line printers with archival inks), but the logo won't help at all with the strategy.

2 out of 10

Monday, June 27, 2005

FedEx | H&R Block | Netscape


THE GREAT:
FedEx




I once read an interview on the Web with one of the great graphic designers of the 20th Century, Paul Rand. The interview was completely unedited (update: here it is), and the interviewer and the designer were talking about the new FedEx logo as they were getting themselves comfortable, and fussing with the tape recorder.







Rand spent much of his time complaining about how unnecessarily wide the logo was, and that some space could have been saved by combining the two verticals of the "d" and "E." He also went on about the thickness of the characters. At one point he suggested that the designer should have used a condensed font.

But he seemed to miss the point that the logo looks like it does because it is completely designed around the perfectly geometric arrow, hidden between the "E" and the "x."


My guess is that the "d" and the "E" have to remain separate because the color of the "Ex" changes in order to differentiate the company's various services and logo uses (Green is used for "Ground").




Federal Express changed its name to FedEx because they finally gave in to the fact that people always shorten names, or add character to names that have none. Their customers had won. And, so did FedEx: after the name change, the company took off like a shot
.

7 out of 10




THE LAME:
H&R Block




A lime green square (block) with an un-kerned wordmark (Frutiger Bold) placed rather disproportionately small next to it. The point being that this is a new, bolder H&R Block.








H&R Block is a company with strong brand recognition all over North America, but the beauty of the branding aspect of the logo is how completely simplistic, yet radical, the actual
bug is compared to the previous logo, and to the actual business of H&R Block.

It took something like 11 months to get to this. The lime block (limestone?) is used throughout the company's advertising and marketing, even as bullets on the website.

6 out of 10



THE VILE:
Netscape




Oh my. This is truly one of the worst high-profile logos out there. No finesse. No ownership in the way of modification on the serif'ed "N." And a color ramp to boot. The color combo is unique at least.










The current wordmark uses a more contemporary sans serif, as well as going with a lowercase setting, which highlights the more interesting character traits of the small letters.




Netscape held a contest back in the good ol' days for the design of their corporate logo. Somebody won. Three stars for doing something interesting like a contest. One star off for not taking their ID more seriously.

3 out of 10