Other Symbolism in NFL Logos

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Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

Im completely overwhelmed GG, first of all....Stop making fun of "flying Elvis" and second, that tower is actually sending messages to alien life forms which beam down brain jamming signals into the opponents brains (similar to radar jamming) before each snap. As for CBS there are building CBS zone currently at patriot place and will be launching satallites to spy on opponents during their training and practices, begining next season......................:D
 
Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

Im completely overwhelmed GG, first of all....Stop making fun of "flying Elvis" and second, that tower is actually sending messages to alien life forms which beam down brain jamming signals into the opponents brains (similar to radar jamming) before each snap. As for CBS there are building CBS zone currently at patriot place and will be launching satallites to spy on opponents during their training and practices, begining next season......................:D

You're in Boston, you're brainwashed.
 

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Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

The Cleveland Browns were founded in 1944 as a charter member of the All-America Football Conference, under businessman Arthur B "Mickey" McBride.[1] Not long after gaining the franchise, McBride named Ohio State Buckeyes coach Paul Brown as vice president, general manager and head coach.

A fan contest was conducted to determine the name of the team, with the most popular choice being "Panthers." However, Brown objected to the name after finding out it had been used by a semipro team in the city—one that had a reputation as a chronic loser. This prompted a second contest to choose a name befitting a champion.[2] The Browns say this contest yielded the nickname "Brown Bombers"—after reigning heavyweight champion Joe Louis—and was shortened to "Browns" for the convenience of headline writers. However, to this day, rumors persist that the team was named after Paul Brown himself.

Brown parlayed his ties to the Buckeyes and the Navy (where he'd coached a base football team during World War II) into the most extensive recruitment network that had ever been seen at the time in pro football. He used it to assemble a team that, in terms of talent, would have been more than a match for any NFL team—including quarterback Otto Graham, kicker/offensive tackle Lou Groza, wide receiver Mac Speedie, fullback Marion Motley and nose guard Bill Willis. For a team that claims to have been named for an African-American boxer, Motley and Willis were the first African-Americans to play in a pro football game in 13 years.

The Browns dominated the AAFC, winning all four of its championships including the 1948 season in which they became the first unbeaten and untied team in professional football history- 24 years before the NFL's perfect team, the 1972 Miami Dolphins and 59 years before the 2007 New England Patriots. Cleveland's undefeated streak (including 2 ties) reached 29 games, and included 18 straight wins and the 1947 and 1948 AAFC championship games. During the AAFC's four-year run, the Browns lost only four games.
....

Aside from football, some believed McBride's horse racing syndicate venture was not entirely above-board. In January 1951, McBride testified in nationally televised hearings before the Senate Crime Investigating Committee, which questioned his Continental Press Service, a nationwide distributor of horse racing news, about his alleged ties to organized crime and participation in illegal gambling. McBride denied the connections, claimed he never broke the law, and was never charged with any crime. Congress later passed legislation making such wire services illegal.

Original Browns logo...
Browns_1950_Logo.PNG



A brownie/brounie or urisk (Lowland Scots) or brùnaidh, ùruisg, or gruagach (Scottish Gaelic) is a legendary kind of creature popular in folklore around Scotland and England (especially the north). It is the Scottish counterpart of the Scandinavian tomte, the Slavic domovoi or the German Heinzelmännchen.


Customarily brownies are said to inhabit houses and aid in tasks around the house. However, they do not like to be seen and will only work at night, traditionally in exchange for small gifts or food. They take quite a delight in porridge. They usually abandon the house if their gifts are called payments, or if the owners of the house misuse them. Then they turn into Boggarts. Brownies make their homes in a unused part of the house. They were also known as the guardians of dragons.
The ùruisg had the qualities of man and spirit curiously commingled. He had a peculiar fondness for solitude at certain seasons of the year. About the end of Harvest he became more sociable, and hovered about farmyards, stables and cattle-houses. He had a particular fondness for the products of the dairy, and was a fearful intruder on milkmaids, who made regular libations of milk or cream to charm him off, or to procure his favour. He could be seen supposedly only by those who had the second sight, though instances where he made himself visible to people not so Gifted have been rumoured. He is said to have been a jolly personable being with a broad blue bonnet, flowing yellow hair, and a long walking staff.
Every manor house had its ùruisg, and in the kitchen, close by the fire was a seat, which was left unoccupied for him. The house of a proprietor on the banks of the River Tay was even at the beginning of the twentieth century believed to have been haunted by this sprite, and a particular apartment therein has been for centuries called "Seòmar Bhrùnaidh" (Brownie’s room). When irritated through neglect or disrespectful treatment he would not hesitate to become wantonly mischievous. He was notwithstanding, rather gainly and good-natured rather than formidable. Though, on the whole, a lazy, lounging hobgoblin, he would often bestir himself on behalf of those who understood his humours, and suited themselves thereto. When in this mood, he was known to perform many arduous exploits in kitchen, barn and stable, with marvellous precision and rapidity. These kind turns were done without bribe, fee or reward, for the offer of any one of these would banish him forever. Kind treatment was all he ever wished for, and it never failed to procure his favour.
In 1703, John Brand wrote in his description of Zetland that:
“Not above forty or fifty years ago, every family had a brownie, or evil spirit, so called, which served them, to which they gave a sacrifice for his service; as when they churned their milk, they took a part thereof, and sprinkled every corner of the house with it, for Brownie’s use; likewise, when they brewed, they had a stone which they called ‘Brownie’s stane’, wherein there was a little hole into which they poured some wort for a sacrifice to Brownie. They also had some stacks of corn, which they called Brownie’s Stacks, which, though they were not bound with straw ropes, or in any way fenced as other stacks used to be, yet the greatest storm of wind was not able to blow away straw off them.” The brownies seldom discoursed with man, but they held frequent and affectionate converse with one another. They had their general assemblies too, and on those occasions they commonly selected for their rendezvous the rocky recesses of some remote torrent, whence their loud voices, mingling with the water’s roar, carried to the ears of some wondering superstition detached parts of their unearthly colloquies. In a certain district of the Scottish Highlands, "Peallaidh an Spùit" (Peallaidh of the Spout), "Stochdail a’ Chùirt", and "Brùnaidh an Easain" (Brownie of the little waterfall) were names of note at those congresses, and they still live in legends which continue to amuse old age and infancy. Every stream in Breadalbane had an ùruisg once according to Watson the Scottish place name expert, and their king was Peallaidh. (Peallaidh's name is preserved in "Obair Pheallaidh", known in English as "Aberfeldy".) It may be the case, that ùruisg was conflated with some water sprite, or that ùruisg were originally water sprites conflated with brownies.
British folklore also included a figure, Billy Blind, much like the brownie, but appearing only in ballads.


The myth of the brownie is central to Neil Gaiman's novel, American Gods. In the novel, the brownie is portrayed as a powerful Germanic spirit that protects and provides for a town, while at the same time taking young people as sacrifices.
By extension, the name of Brownies was given to the junior branch of the Girl Guides (American Girl Scouts) as well as their Canadian counterparts.

....
 
Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

It's a bit weird when you think about it...

New England Patriots is a bit of a contradiction there.
Should be either New England Monarchs
or Boston Patriots like it used to be.

If you analyze the New England Patriots logo, it's actually got hidden Free Mason occult Satanic Illuminati symbolism in it.

new_england_patriots_logo_200.jpg


The American flag is being falsely represented by a single star over the forehead of the Patriot, the forehead representing one of the main occult Chakras. The star itself a 5 pointed pentagram which is of course a Satanic symbol. The flag itself is torn into strips, which is a reference to the destruction and perversion of the American Constitution for which Boston founded....which relates to the name change from Boston to New England as representing a renewed Monarchial or elitist Illumaniti attitude. The two red stripes clearly representing hellish fire, which again is another reference to Satanistic worship. But how that is broken off from the two blue strips is actually a time-old Free Mason symbolism. And finally the larger blue strip at the end is clearly part of the 'Patriots' head, which when looked at properly, including his face, is akin to many historical artworks of Lucifer, the Prince of Darkness, who is depicted in the same pointy angular manner. Notice the sideburn too. Again another classical depiction of Beezlebub.

Compare that with the Boston Patriots original logo...

patstbdecal.jpg


This image is more representative of the origins of Free Masonry in the United States thru the Monarchial imagery of the English who colonized the United States and tried to actually enslave it back then thru the Central Bank system. It's a very obvious deliberate falisfying between the name Patriots and the image of a Monarchial Free Mason agenda. Notice how there is no American flag, but actually a very English looking logo. The same artwork style that was common of 17th Century English painters. The 'Patriot' in the logo is also depicted with a very arrogant "monarchial" smirk of self-superiority. And the red socks worn is also again another tip at the Free Mason influence running right thru the Boston area. Note, the Boston Red Sox MLB team.

Good read mate, you have way too much time on your hands IMO! :thumbsu:
 
Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

Good read mate, you have way too much time on your hands IMO! :thumbsu:
lol have you looked through the rest of the thread Bluey :D

BUT...I must commend gg on his amazing research and work ethic :D
 
Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

It's a bit weird when you think about it...

New England Patriots is a bit of a contradiction there.
Should be either New England Monarchs
or Boston Patriots like it used to be.

If you analyze the New England Patriots logo, it's actually got hidden Free Mason occult Satanic Illuminati symbolism in it.

new_england_patriots_logo_200.jpg


The American flag is being falsely represented by a single star over the forehead of the Patriot, the forehead representing one of the main occult Chakras. The star itself a 5 pointed pentagram which is of course a Satanic symbol. The flag itself is torn into strips, which is a reference to the destruction and perversion of the American Constitution for which Boston founded....which relates to the name change from Boston to New England as representing a renewed Monarchial or elitist Illumaniti attitude. The two red stripes clearly representing hellish fire, which again is another reference to Satanistic worship. But how that is broken off from the two blue strips is actually a time-old Free Mason symbolism. And finally the larger blue strip at the end is clearly part of the 'Patriots' head, which when looked at properly, including his face, is akin to many historical artworks of Lucifer, the Prince of Darkness, who is depicted in the same pointy angular manner. Notice the sideburn too. Again another classical depiction of Beezlebub.

Compare that with the Boston Patriots original logo...

patstbdecal.jpg


This image is more representative of the origins of Free Masonry in the United States thru the Monarchial imagery of the English who colonized the United States and tried to actually enslave it back then thru the Central Bank system. It's a very obvious deliberate falisfying between the name Patriots and the image of a Monarchial Free Mason agenda. Notice how there is no American flag, but actually a very English looking logo. The same artwork style that was common of 17th Century English painters. The 'Patriot' in the logo is also depicted with a very arrogant "monarchial" smirk of self-superiority. And the red socks worn is also again another tip at the Free Mason influence running right thru the Boston area. Note, the Boston Red Sox MLB team.

Who cares, we're going back to the Superbowls !!!

Perfect Patriots, what more is there to say GG, I hope you like those apples :D
 

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Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

my head is spinning. . . .too much conspiracy for a wednesday afternoon!
 
Re: Symbolism in NFL Logos - Part I: Analyzing the Patriots

I never saw this thread the first time around. Fantastic work gg!

Who cares, we're going back to the Superbowls !!!

Perfect Patriots, what more is there to say GG, I hope you like those apples :D

Oops!
 
....
A cup with the Oakland Raiders logo was set on a desk. Students began to tell the professor what they saw.

Here are some of the responses:

1.One student said he saw a depressed man.
2.A student said he saw a very aggressive man.
3.Another student said he saw a man who had been beheaded.
4.Another student said he saw a strong warrior.
5.A student saw a shield
And, the perceptions went on and on.

An article on the logo was read to them. The idea was to inspire them to see deeply, as we sometimes see different things in artwork.

We see the Oakland Raiders logo differently because what we see is often related to the experiences that each of us have.

Then, the students were told what the professor saw.

The professor saw the following:

•a helmet
•two swords
•a head
•a face
•a patch
•a shield
Possibly more symbols.

The other symbols the professor saw were:

•alef
•dalet
•continuity
•openness
•two double-edged swords
•increased ability of the other senses when compared to the patched eye
•a paradox in the finite and infinite represented by alef (similar to an A)
•selflessness represented by dalet (similar to a D)
 
The professor also saw:


  • No Superbowls in the long-term future for the Raiders logo
  • An increased number of worrying draft picks / trades made by the Raiders logo
  • Another move to Los Angeles and back by the Raiders logo
 
the browns had that cool mud dog logo a couple of years ago. should totally put it on a helmet. would be bad-ass!
 
the browns had that cool mud dog logo a couple of years ago. should totally put it on a helmet. would be bad-ass!

Or the angry fans tearing down the stadium every time they lose.
 

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