Don't Mess With Who Dat

Murphy'sBoy

1,000+ Posts
This is how to get elected!!!!

U.S. Sen. David Vitter, R-La., has released a letter he wrote to National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell about the NFL's claim that it owns the "Who Dat?" trademark.

The text of Vitter's letter, as released by his office, is below:

Dear Commissioner Goodell:
I was stunned to learn recently that the NFL is taking the position that it owns the exclusive trademark of the term "Who Dat" and has even threatened legal action against some mom-and-pop merchants selling t-shirts using the term. I would urge you to drop this obnoxious and legally unsustainable position and instead agree that "Who Dat" is in the public domain, giving no one exclusive trademark rights.

This letter will also serve as formal legal notice that I am having t-shirts printed that say "WHO DAT say we can't print Who Dat!" for widespread sale in commerce. Please either drop your present ridiculous position or sue me.

"Who Dat" was probably first heard in New Orleans minstrel shows well over 130 years ago. Much more recently, but before it was used in connection with the Saints, it was used as a rallying cry by St. Augustine High School in New Orleans. In the 1980s it was adopted by Saints fans in a completely spontaneous way. Only later did any legal persons, including the Saints and the NFL, try to claim it through registration.

Perhaps more significant than this history, "Who Dat" has become part of New Orleans and Louisiana popular culture. For the NFL to try to claim exclusive ownership of it would be like me registering and trying to claim exclusive ownership of the terms "lagniappe" and "laissez les bons temps rouler!”

Under Paul Tagliabue's leadership, the NFL was an unbelievable partner in helping us recover and rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. Thank you again. We look forward to your dropping your “Who Dat” position so that this partnership can continue without strain or blemish.

Sincerely,

David Vitter
Junior Senator of Who Dat Nation
 
Texas baseball fans were given an awesome treat many years ago when the Grambling Tigers visited Disch-FALK Field and brought their "Who Dat?" chant with them.
 
good for him, and I would imagine that if he could get some kind of documentation of the history reaching back even as recent as anytime before the New Orleans Saints existed, I would think he would win.

I would think that if who day existed before the Saints, then that would prove it's a culture thing, not a Saints thing.
 
I wouldn't mind if that expression got banned outright. I would absolutely hate it if that was something we said here in Austin. I guess it is a Louisiana culture thing, but I really don't get it.
 
******** like this is one of the reasons I quit following NFL football at all - well, that and Jerrah Jones...

As a grade-schooler (during the days of separate-but-equal schooling) I, along with two friends who later became sportswriters, used to go on Thursday nights to watch Booker T. Washington HS play football. We went mostly to see the inventive formations and plays, but also to see and hear the band, which was an order of magnitude above the white hs bands in song selection and performance... but the one thing that stands out in my memories is a cheer that recalls "Who Dat":

Who ah?
Who ah?
Who ah we?
We ah!
We ah! Bookah Teeeeee!!!
 
I guess it is a Louisiana culture thing, but I really don't get it.
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It is just that, the Saints version of Hook Em
 
I can't wait for Peyton Manning & Co. to win so I don't have to hear people say "Who Dat" for another 8 months.
 
I heard that the NFL also dropped it because the Catholic Church threatened to sue the NFL for the use of Saints in one of the team's name.
smile.gif
 

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