That Nike slogan goes back to the ‘80s and was inspired by a guy on death row who told his executioners: "Let’s do this." An advertising agency picked it up and pitched it to Nike. The commercials that followed inspired millions to do what they’d been putting off. They got married. Got divorced. Had kids. Quit their jobs. Started businesses. It had a monster effect. (And sold a lot of shoes.)
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
suit yourself, Lio
Postcards From Richard Nixon over 3 years ago
LOL Those signs make it look like border from Canada into the U.S.
jimmjonzz Premium Member over 3 years ago
Mirkwood.
Bilan over 3 years ago
My idea of just doing it in that case would be turning back and running away
rimose over 3 years ago
♫ Run away, run away, run away and save your life. Run away, run away, run away if you want to survive. ♪
BlitzMcD over 3 years ago
And once again, the hopes of many will crushed as he returns tomorrow unscathed, as if this never happened.
hangedman over 3 years ago
‘Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.’ Who first said that?
jagedlo over 3 years ago
So remove the swoosh and remove any chances of being sued for trademark infringement…
gammaguy over 3 years ago
No second panel. Maybe there’s a reason for that?
willie_mctell over 3 years ago
Always thought that slogan was for people with an underdeveloped frontal lobe.
johndifool over 3 years ago
So, what will get him first? The Flame Spurts, The Lightning Sand, or (shudder) the ROUS’s?
raybarb44 over 3 years ago
Fools go where Angels fear to tread…..
random boredom over 3 years ago
Marketing wins over reasoning.
MCProfessor over 3 years ago
“I’d turn back if I were you!”
kathybear over 3 years ago
Well, the trees are a far different menace that the COVID virus he’s been up against in the past. He also doesn’t need his mask…
WCraft Premium Member over 3 years ago
After seeing Nike’s Kaepernick commercial – this looks about right.
Michael McKown Premium Member over 3 years ago
That Nike slogan goes back to the ‘80s and was inspired by a guy on death row who told his executioners: "Let’s do this." An advertising agency picked it up and pitched it to Nike. The commercials that followed inspired millions to do what they’d been putting off. They got married. Got divorced. Had kids. Quit their jobs. Started businesses. It had a monster effect. (And sold a lot of shoes.)