wolverine blues (director's cut)

wolverine blues (director's cut)

wolverine blues (director's cut)

SHIRT TEXT
One needs to marvel at how far we have come in
slaughtering the rights of artists. I mean, why be
original? Why put creative time in when you can
simply copy someone else’s work, change the color
& call it your own? Hey. It’s a parody. Relax. All
is fair in love and war. Wait. Strike that. Reverse it.
Anyways, I’ve had my stuff stolen too. Not that theives
think they have done an injustice. It’s the American way.
Take now. Rationalize later. Don’t believe me? Ask a Native
American. But imitation truly is flattery. And artists must learn
to live on flattery because - if history is any measure of anything -
it’s this: most artists die in poverty. What? No. Don’t get caught up in
the meaning here. It’s here for effect. You know, basic lorem ipsum.
If it’s more than 140 characters no one’s gonna read it. And if you believe
wearing it around on a shirt will change that, you are likely a kid or naive
or both. On January 1, 2019, laws released the copyright from Ferdinand
“Jelly Roll” Morton, Benjamin Spikes & John C. Spike’s hit song. Yes. It’s
actually on YouTube. He was no Lady Gaga. But sometimes, neither is she.
So congratulations dead guys who once wrote and performed Wolverine Blues.
Your song lives on.

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