Twitter Users Discover Weird Subliminal Messages in Chicago Bulls Logo
By Dave Basner
September 18, 2019
Plenty of brands hide things in logos... Ever catch the arrow in FedEx's logo, or in Baskin Robbins' see the 31, a nod to 31 flavors? While it is known that this happens, sometimes people see things in logos that almost certainly aren't intentional. That's the case with the Chicago Bulls. Since their angry, red bull image was created in 1996, people have seen things in it that aren't really there, and it's happening again thanks to a recent tweet by @MDesaad. They pointed out that when the logo is turned upside-down, it resembles something not at all safe for work.
If you turn the Chicago bulls logo upside down it’s a robot having sex with a crab pic.twitter.com/KGfsqyr3Ml
— Deniz Camp @ SDCC (@MDesaad) September 14, 2019
And now I can't unsee it. pic.twitter.com/5kpqdJesWX
— C-Recks (@lyric2go) September 15, 2019
To be fair, the team’s original name was the Chicago Crab Sex Robots, but when that got nixed they had to save money on a name change and new logo.
— Greg Pliska (@gregpliska) September 15, 2019
When Tim Berners-Lee invented the Internet, this ... this exact tweet ... was what he dreamed it would one day produce. #Blessed
— Robb Badlam (@BuckyUnderbelly) September 14, 2019
If they don't make this their third jersey the @NBA is dead to me.
— Sargasm (@EyHol) September 15, 2019
Or a crab robot reading a book
— Mike Champa (@MikeFATS) September 15, 2019
I thought of a robot, sitting in a chair, reading a book. Either I read too much or you're overly fond of crabs :)
— Patch Zircher (@PatrickZircher) September 14, 2019
He’s reading the Bible pic.twitter.com/xegqJZhMLR
— octopus/caveman (@OctopusCaveman) September 15, 2019
As yet, the Bulls haven't commented on the thread.
Photo: Getty Images