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@rb71743 Жыл бұрын
😼Eatings a burger🍔 with no honey🍯 custard😼
@li5up6 Жыл бұрын
CGP grey been real quiet since this dropped 😂
@professionalevilrker Жыл бұрын
The flags are good logos, the problem is we are judging them on the standards of actual nations
@neilp1911 Жыл бұрын
@jjmccullough i would be so psyched if you did a video about the New Zealand flag contest
@desert_druid_xD Жыл бұрын
i just think of you as dorky canadian that id want to pinch on the cheeks like an old grandma (i am a 6ft 5 man with a beard in his prime) you still elicit the "dawwww" factor but in like a historical and calm way
@ziebelzubel Жыл бұрын
I'd pay real money to see/listen to a flag debate between JJ and CGP Grey
@AliAhmed-ez2zy Жыл бұрын
I feel like there would be hands thrown LMAO
@IndyCarFan265 Жыл бұрын
that would get so heated holy shit lmao
@billotron5521 Жыл бұрын
@TheRealSlimIndy Both are reasonable people, so I don't think it would get table flipping crazy tho. I think it would be more like both leaving with the same opinion, but maybe pulled slightly closer tp the other person's side. I agree tho that would be awesome to see.
@brainwashingdetergent4322 Жыл бұрын
Sha! Don’t forget about ol Brady Haran too! Long live Nail and Gear!
@evergreen1798 Жыл бұрын
Considering we got Jreg on his channel already it might actually happen.
@mcmilkmcmilk9638 Жыл бұрын
JJ casually upsetting the entire flag community.
@nade7242 Жыл бұрын
it's ok because flag community is a bunch of nerds smh
@LazyCat010 Жыл бұрын
Shots fired 😂
@chucklebutt4470 Жыл бұрын
r/vexillology is seeeeething
@JonCrs10 Жыл бұрын
All those poor vexed vexillologists
@handyman2233 Жыл бұрын
Flags get a lot of crap. There never cherished and we never wave back.
@ChessedGamon Жыл бұрын
I think the real animosity towards the US state flags comes from their similarities clashing with the sudden rise of the internet and thus desire among many to express their place of origin online. It's hard to do when your cultural symbol can be easily confused for ~20 others just like it. I agree the 'rules of flag design' are too dogmatically followed these days, but I wouldn't go so far as to say the distaste for the state flags are some niche top down phenomenon without genuine public interest.
@bort6459 Жыл бұрын
The reason all those stare flags look so similar is because when they were made, that was the design philosophy of the day. What the champions for contemporary "rules of flag design" miss is that in 100+ years their "good design" will look like a time capsule of a dated trend rather than timeless stnadards perfected in the early 21st century.
@evanpereira3555 Жыл бұрын
Lot of people forget the 0th rule aka "Nuance is key, you can break the rules" I mean the flag of South Africa (too much color), Nepal (weird shape), Brazil and Iran (letterering), Sàmi (tincture), Saint-Pierre and Miquelon (flagS on flag) are beautiful. And no need to mention all the flag with complex part like seal (Nicaragua), coat-of-arm (Spain) or... something (Portugal's armillary sphere) or just design overall (Sri Lanka).
@Stuie299 Жыл бұрын
I 100% agree with this. I don't really care for the whole seal on a bedsheet design, but its more because I personally just think they're boring. I couldn't care less about some completely arbitrary set of flag rules.
@SylviaRustyFae Жыл бұрын
Its not that hard to make it distinctive still... My home state manages to remind you in the biggest letterin possible that it is both a state and called Oregon xD I think they put "State of Oregon" there instd of just Oregon like most states with their name opted for... Bcuz Oregon Territory used to be a thing and that covered most of the PNW from the eastern edge of Idaho and everythin west and north of it prty much, even into British Columbia (tho they didnt call it Oregon Territory; yes, USA and UK used to have joint custody of the pacific northwest xD) They probs rly wanted to show off that theyre the real Oregon, the State of Oregon, no longer just a territory heh
@gwynedd8179 Жыл бұрын
@@bort6459 The Danish flag design is 800 years old and still looks great?
@spaceace4263 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Connecticut, with a "s.o.b" flag, and I have a vivid memory of being in elementary school being taught about the cultural significance of the intricate stamp on the state flag and being encouraged to try to replicate it in a drawing to prove how hard it would be to forge an official seal on important documents. (This was a graded assignment but we all got 100s for effort lol)
@asherl5902 Жыл бұрын
Connecticut's flag / seal / coat of arms is among the simplest symbols grom among US states, lol
@johndavenport2847 Жыл бұрын
I was about to comment something similar about my experience growing up in Pennsylvania
@xant834411 ай бұрын
Yeah that's just not really a reason for it to be used on a flag
@vasectomybro5 ай бұрын
So cool! That is actually a great reasonw by seals do not belong on flags.
@calebheidel2292 Жыл бұрын
As a resident of Maryland, I heavily sympathize with the argument that a flag’s value is based on its people’s embrace of it. Our flag doesn’t follow all of the design rules (it’s polarizing for lots of on-lookers)… But when you drive around the state, you see it plastered proudly all over by its people - and it’s a beautiful thing. Beyond that though, I do generally think that the flag design rules are very useful guidelines that result in more accessible and enjoyable designs for viewers (even if these rules aren’t the ‘end all be all’). Seals and flags are different mediums with different uses that us humans are perfecting and understanding better over generations.
@bromleylowe2720 Жыл бұрын
Maryland's flag rules! ... Because it breaks all the rules. Even the criticized CPG Grey video acknowledges that. Maybe the top factor of what makes a good state flag is how it's citizens embrace it ... Flag related merchandise sales could be an interesting metric to measure that.
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
I think flags do have a "rule of cool" about them. If you've got a distinctive and clever design that bends a few flag "rules" then that's better than something bland but conformist.
@Calvinioli Жыл бұрын
Maryland's flag Is probably one of my favorites. It catches the eye and stands out among a bunch of restrictive designs. It doesn't bother to fit in but rather embraces the cacophony of colors and shapes in a way that anybody trying to copy it would fail. What makes it better is the embrace of the flag. Honestly the only flag rule should be to try not to conform to a generalized sort of rules. You need a flag that can stick out among the others in its own way but, most importantly, it should be a symbol that people can stand behind and embrace.
@MushrooMilkshake Жыл бұрын
It's a gross flag and a PITA to make
@crimsonghost4107 Жыл бұрын
I know a guy from Maryland and he's the only person I know that owns merchandise with a state flag on it.
@timothyfenton6876 Жыл бұрын
I think the most important role a flag should have is a recognizable way to distinguish and celebrate where you’re from. Being from NY we have no real love for our state flag but I’m always amazed when I see how much Coloradans, Californias, Washingtonians (DC), Texans, South Carolinians, and Alaskans celebrate their flags. It just seems like there is a very clear distinction in which every state without a SOB has vibrant flag culture but no state with a SOB has any flag culture.
@navbravic1355 Жыл бұрын
Was just in Delaware and shocked to see their (sob) flag being flown everywhere.
@Calvinioli Жыл бұрын
The biggest problem I have with SOB flags are that, at a glance, they are nearly identical. The flags hold no specific value or symbolism in themselves, it is just the seal, which is hard to make out in most scenarios, that holds that weight. In the original use of flags they were meant to stand out and contrast with the enemy while on the battlefield to better conduct troops which very few of the SOBs would be able to accomplish. Modern flags don't need this use in most cases but should be easily recognizable for cases of regional pride. Most states with diverse flag designs one can point out a flag and say "I'm from there" while people from SOB flag states will have to wait for the seal to be shown to maybe recognize it. The purpose behind a seal and flag are very different. A seal was made highly intricate to avoid forgery while a flag was meant to convey information quickly and without confusion. Also if the US flag was just a seal on a blue field do you think it would be as beloved as the stars and stripes?
@fructiferous Жыл бұрын
and new mexicans! best flag
@jordanjames2956 Жыл бұрын
I am from Utah and the state recently adopted a new flag. I personally hate it because I think it is ugly. It has also become a massive partisan issue here in the state.
@MrLamb94 Жыл бұрын
I'm Californian and I do love my flag. Have a full size flag hung up right above my computer lol. Never thought about how other states feel about their flag
@AlwaysAmTired Жыл бұрын
I can't say I agree that the reason people aren't attached to their flags is lack of education instead of design. I live in Chicago where everyone loves the flag because it's a great design that easily lends itself to clothing, tattoos, etc. That love for the design leads people to become educated on the symbolism and history, not the other way around. A good design will get people interested.
@timdavis1874 Жыл бұрын
I agree with the line from the pro "good flag design" people in that a rule of thumb for a good flag is that it is used in marketing and branding, art, etc. mostly independent of any organized push to put the design out there (e.g., from a government or agency that uses the flag.) The 99% Invisible episode on good city flag design highlights the Chicago flag as an example of this. What better heuristic for a good flag design than the people of the community adopting and repurposing it on their own?
@millenniumvintage9726 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly why Marylanders love our flag too
@clowneggion Жыл бұрын
Despite how much U.S. central/southern illinoisians despise Chicago, you’d find exponentially more people here attached to the Chicago flag than our generic bald eagle on printer paper state flag
@AReservoirDog Жыл бұрын
I agree the "Rules of flag design" are often taken way to zealously online. However, I also believe that if enough people who care really feel that their state flag doesn't represent the state they should change it, and I'm happy to see so many better designs coming along like Utah and Mississipi. The less seal-on-a-bedsheet the better. Even a bad flag identity is better than no identity at all.
@jordanjames2956 Жыл бұрын
I am from Utah I much prefer the old flag. There is a major movement here to have the change reversed.
@louisinese Жыл бұрын
I agree, also 69th like. Nice.
@ObjectsInMotion Жыл бұрын
@@jordanjames2956, no, there really isn’t. I have not heard a single a person here prefer the older flag over the newer one. Are you sure it isn’t just confirmation bias on your part?
@Grimpen0 Жыл бұрын
The problem I have with the "Seal on a bedsheet" is that a Seal is a Seal, and a flag is a flag. You can have two different things. Get a pin with a seal to go with the patch of the flag on your backpack. The "rules" of flag design aren't really rules, but they do give a good set of guidelines for a flag that works well as a flag. Indeed, a great flag might even break some of those rules for cause. I think I keep seeing the California flag as a flag that breaks one of the rules (the text especially), but it's a popular flag, and is certainly iconic. The Seal on a bedsheet flags though just seem lazy. At the very least, just take the elements *on* the seal and translate them into a flag. You don't need the supporters and heraldic embellishments that accompany the main escutcheon of the seal. Like Massachusetts, just put the guy and the star on a blue background. If you were going to make a Massachusetts Knights unit, and issue them state shields, would you put an image of the shield on the shield, or just what's on the shield on the real shield?
@AReservoirDog Жыл бұрын
@Grimpen0 I am from Connecticut, and sometimes encorporating part of a seal doesn't work either. Our flag has a fancy shield shaped similar to the route 66 sign. In the middle of the shield, there are 3 grape vines. It isn't seal on a bed-sheet, but it looks like it from a far. The blue background doesn't help either. It's sad to me that none of the New English states incorporate Green into their flag.
@connection_ok Жыл бұрын
Even though this video hasn't changed my mind too much on flag design, because I actually really personally prefer more simple, macroscopic flags, it is super important to understand WHY flags are the way they are and that these "rules" are subjective, and JJ does an immaculate amount of research to tell us why. Thank you JJ.
@benjaminrobinson3842 Жыл бұрын
Okay, so the rules aren't as hard and fast as, say, laws of physics, but some of them do serve a practical purpose. Being distinctive and "readable" from afar is useful for identifying ships at sea, even today. Barring lettering isn't that important for a state flag, since we all have the same alphabet, but lettering on a national flag just makes it harder for people with a different language to understand.
@xylo5750 Жыл бұрын
@@benjaminrobinson3842 Did you watch the video you're commenting on? Why does being readable from afar or being understood by people from multiple languages matter for STATE flags? California isn't going to war with Texas (anytime soon), and there's no reason for a ship to know that a ship is from California (as opposed to just American). As JJ points out, state flags are mostly symbolic and the most important place they're used is probably the gift shop.
@benjaminrobinson3842 Жыл бұрын
@@xylo5750 Did you read the comment that you're replying to? I said, "Barring lettering isn't that important for a state flag ..." Although JJ's main point is the "rules" don't fit well with the purpose of state flags, he also heavily implied that they were arbitrary and served little importance generally, which I thought was was reaching a bit too far.
@TheDukeOfWaltham11 ай бұрын
@@benjaminrobinson3842 The Saudis don't seem to care that most of the world can't read what's written on their flag… Never mind the Taliban. Personally, what bothers me about lettering is that it renders the rest of the flag redundant: what's the point of using any designs when you can simply fly a blue sheet with your state's name in big white letters? (Or black on white, for that matter.) This is a parody of a flag, a sign printed on fabric, and very much an admission of failure in creating a distinctive visual identity. Conversely, there are several examples of commercial logos that used to include the company name and eventually removed it, because it wasn't needed any more: people recognise the logos of Shell, Mastercard, Starbucks and McDonald's from the image alone. (Twitter as well, before Musk killed it.) Having a name in a logo is not bad per se, but not needing it is a sign that they've arrived: enjoying near-universal recognisability is high praise for a brand. And in a sense, nations and places are brands too.
@alexanderhoak Жыл бұрын
Personally, I have the same problem with "seal on a bedsheet" flags that I have with "Pan-Arab", "Pan-African", "Pan-Slavic", or really any other tri-color flags. They all kind of just blend together. Not only do they get boring and repetitive, but they can also easily be confused with one another. As someone currently trying to memorize all 197 national flags, I have been stuck on Africa for weeks because there is so much red, yellow, and green that I don't even know where to begin.
@alexanderhoak Жыл бұрын
@seanolaocha940 I did actually get them figured out shortly after I made this comment. I ended up just doing Sporcle quizzes on repeat until I could consistently get them all without trouble.
@JimmyMon666 Жыл бұрын
As someone who gets Germany and Belgium confused I could never do that. Tri color flags suck. And I'm looking at you too France.
@frocoshake2107 Жыл бұрын
I think that a lot of the other American flag designs are like this too, but only that they largely use red, white and blue and stars in them. Utah and Mississippi's flag designs share a lot of motifs.
@alexanderhoak Жыл бұрын
@@frocoshake2107 I assume you are talking about Mississippi's old flag and Utah's new flag? Those are different than tri-colors because they have notable symbols on them that bear significance to the states. Similarly, the Pan-Slavic (plus Slovenian) flags don't get the same flak as Russia, France, Netherlands, and Luxembourg. Despite being parts of the same tri-color family, they all have unique crests which make them easier to tell apart.
@alexanderhoak Жыл бұрын
Though let's also not forget that Utah's flag changed to what it is now from a... (ahem) Seal on a Bedsheet.
@JoaoNascimento-uq8yg Жыл бұрын
I still think that it is more aesthetically pleasing when flags have more individuality from afar and can be distinguished when put together.
@forestkane_ Жыл бұрын
Yea JJ can kick rocks on this topic, I like that flags have rules
@BetterJS Жыл бұрын
Disagree with both of you. You both want a world full of the most boring flags imaginable...
@forestkane_ Жыл бұрын
@@BetterJS No JJ just spent 20 mins telling us how cool seals are ... which they are cool but not on flags
@CharlieGrant-yv1zy Жыл бұрын
I'm not a fan of seals on flags but a big part of the problem is they put the seal in the same place with the same colour background. Washington is so much more recognisable as it uses green and not blue
@minutemansam1214 Жыл бұрын
@@BetterJS Every SoB flag is indistinguishable at a distance.
@AndaiMB Жыл бұрын
I think my main issue with the the “seal on bedsheet” design is how formulaic it is. Washington’s use of a green background instead of a blue one is enough for it to stand out from the rest of the bunch. Standing out is more important than a fulfilling certain set of rules in my opinion.
@Goallpeashooters Жыл бұрын
100%. I don't get why most states use blue in their backdrops. A lot of states need to change that to a more recognizable color that fits and represents their states history, and culture better.
@dr.casebolt Жыл бұрын
Agreed -- I grew up in a "seal" state (WV), but the main design of the flag is more interesting (and distinguishable). I think that's the main problem with all the dark-blue seal flags -- if the backgrounds had more variety of color, they would be better.
@hammersandnails1458 Жыл бұрын
Actually, since they are all state flags, perhaps they should have a common design theme.
@tkdcoastskater9809Ай бұрын
@@Goallpeashooters Super late response. The background of SOB flags are Union blue as these flags were the regimental colors for union troops. It was the flag they would go to battle with, rally behind, or even die defending. I think it is regrettable that people hate SOB flags so much when it represents true pride and heritage. Instead of the confederate flag, which represents a deplorable history, SOB flags represent living up to the revolutionary values of equality, and honor those who gave their life so others could live free.
@GoallpeashootersАй бұрын
@@tkdcoastskater9809 Yeah actually I learned exactly this recently and I no longer hate the blue on my state flag of Michigan. Thousands of my states people died to end the horror that was slavery.
@d.b.scoville Жыл бұрын
The most damning aspect of the seal flags is that people from their states don’t even seem to like them. In comparison California’s flag also breaks the rules but Californians actually use their flag and it’s iconic so no one asks to change it.
@jacobbwalters8133 Жыл бұрын
As a Michigander I like my flag…
@prisonmike7179 Жыл бұрын
I'm from massachusetts and I genuinely don't like our flag
@magdavillafuerte Жыл бұрын
A lot of people in Utah like their flag, that's why the flag debate has become a political debate in Utah.
@danielkafka5676 Жыл бұрын
Almost like it’s a flag we can visualize and draw?
@fuckeduphippie Жыл бұрын
@@magdavillafuerte I mean sorta. They couldn’t pull the signatures to stop the change. I’m in Utah, I prefer the solution the state made. Just fly both them. The new one is so much more marketable which was obviously the point. So if we’re flying both at the government buildings, I don’t see the downside.
@hubbabubba8083 Жыл бұрын
As a VIRGINIAN you used our flag so many times for reference and I’m so happy cause it is based and about killing tyrants so I want it to stay forever!
@blakekaveny Жыл бұрын
I’m surprised the governor isn’t against it since it shows a nipple
@EnderDeveloper Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: The Virginia government literally charges you $35 to produce a design with it legally.
@therethere508 Жыл бұрын
It's the greatest ever, I'm so proud of us
@ceseum Жыл бұрын
Lets go Virginia! We have nothing here but we're kinda nice!
@spencers5898 Жыл бұрын
@@ceseum We have lots here. Centuries of history (arguably more than any other state), the economic benefits of proximity to Washington, D.C., the fifth highest percentage (and eighth highest number) of advanced degree holders amongst the 50 states, the vast natural beauty of both the Chesapeake Bay and the Blue Ridge Mountains, the best living history museum in the country, one of the best theme parks in the country, the 2nd oldest university in the country, a highly prestigious medical school, a major NASA flight facility... I lived out west for five years before moving back to my native Virginia. I won't specify the state to avoid offending people, but I learned during that time what it truly is to live in an area where there's "nothing there."
@mikeytaylorjr Жыл бұрын
JJ, usually when you go contrarian I cross my arms and go "tsk tsk JJ, don't be contrarian! (wikipedia). But for this one you actually converted me. As a resident of Virginia, I always thought my flag was "bad" but I see your point of "bad at what exactly"? What other flag has nudity and violence? That's something every Virginian can be proud of.
@phtown Жыл бұрын
Personally I've always loved our PG-13 flag. I don't own anything with the flag on it, but I should look into fixing that.
@pharmesq Жыл бұрын
Virginia is for lovers. Of nudity and violence. That tracks. Then again, Virginia is by far the best of the SOB flags simply because it has those badass features. Most SOB flags are like, yeah, agriculture and industry. Cool story bro.
@Panory Жыл бұрын
@@pharmesq To be fair, agriculture and industry are the themes of the Soviet Union's flag, and, for all their faults, it's a pretty awesome flag.
@bobbyferg9173 Жыл бұрын
@@Panory The difference is that the hammer and sickle were two simple shapes that created a simple, but powerful symbol. The SOB flags often are something like a depiction of a farm next to a river or in general have a lot going on that detracts from simple symbolism
@maxk.6725 Жыл бұрын
A lot of people fly the Californian or Texan Flags while no one flies the New York or Pennsylvanian Flags. A think a big reason for this is that these blue flags are not unique enough for people to care about them or have an emotional attachment to them.
@wesleycanada3675 Жыл бұрын
Yep love AZs flag I couldn’t find nys flag anywhere in nyc
@PierzStyx Жыл бұрын
I think it had nothing to do with the flash design and everything to do with the string sense of identity Texas and California had vs. Pennsylvania or New York outside of NYC (which had its own strong city based identity. )
@thesinfultictac5704 Жыл бұрын
Texas was a country and California almost became a country. After Alaska they are the two biggest states. There is a long history associated with both flags.
@riskyfueI Жыл бұрын
@@PierzStyx I would argue a lot of states with "SOB" flags have a strong sense of identity. Or at least I'd say that Maine, Louisiana, New Jersey, Oregon, and Pennsylvania have just as much if not a larger sense of identity than say, New Mexico, Maryland, Arizona, or South Carolina. And yet the former states are much less likely to fly their state's flag because they're not very distinct or well-liked. I don't think we should shame people for liking an SOB flag or force them to change or whatever, but there's a reason some flags people remember and others don't. You also mention NYC, but could you tell me what NYC's flag actually is? It suffers from the same fate. Meanwhile, Chicago, DC, and even Des Moines have distinct, simple flags that it's residents commonly know and use. Does Des Moines have a stronger sense of identity than New York City?
@nikitakuznetsov3449 Жыл бұрын
When I started going to school in Ohio the first thing I did was hang up my PA flag. Does this get me made fun of? Yes. Is PA better than Ohio? Also yes.
@jacobbeaulieu2675 Жыл бұрын
As a Mainer, I would just like to share my thoughts about my own flags discourse... - First things first, in Maine we have an official seal flag and a pine tree flag that is unofficial but used to be the state flag (it was changed to a seal flag to show a form of conformity and reverence to the national government during the civil war that many Mainers died fighting in) -Anyway I think that both flags are neat but the pine tree one is better for one main reason. the current flag is detailed and has the slogan "dirigo" or "i lead" which is cool because Maine gets the first day light in the states and can be seen as a progressive metaphor. However I think the old flag is better because PEOPLE LIKE IT. You see it everywhere in this state and it's in the popular culture everywhere, you can buy it in so many places and I see it being flown in both right and left wing spaces. It has a tan color which many flags don't have and frankly it looks neat. Finally I think that modern flag discourse has really become a conversation of identity (look at pride flags). In our modern world I don't think that going back to our old unique flag will in any way diminish the civil war meaning of the seal flag and I personally hope that the seal design stays as a great state seal. However the people have clearly spoken and we want a sleek and cool way to refer to our regional identity.
@alanlight7740 Жыл бұрын
Yes, the old one was better.
@mediocrelookinghotdog Жыл бұрын
I feel like flags shouldn't have rules, but they should mainly be based on how people fell, or something like that I think.
@realityChemist Жыл бұрын
I'm literally wearing a shirt right now with the old pine tree flag on it! It's just really neat, I like the way it looks! I'm with you on this one (including your points about the motto, which I do quite like as well)
@carolthedabbler2105 Жыл бұрын
Never lived in Maine, but I like the pine tree flag, one of the few state flags that I recognize. Disappointed that it's no longer official -- though what difference does being "official" actually make? "Back Home Again in Indiana" is a blatant rip-off of Indiana's official state song, but hardly anyone knows or recognizes "On the Banks of the Wabash."
@finlip_ Жыл бұрын
Exactly! I see quite a few old Maine flags flying and you can find the old Maine flag on so many things, but at least around me nobody flies the current flag.
@kyledaily9532 Жыл бұрын
I've always wished the Oregon flag could just be the beaver we have on the back without the seal on the front
@StephanieLeighG Жыл бұрын
Your flag has two different sides? I didn’t realize that was an option.
@moonverine Жыл бұрын
We in Oregon want a beaver with attitude. They're edgy, they're "in your face." You've heard the expression, "let's get busy"? Well, this is a beaver who gets "biz-zay!" Consistently and thoroughly.
@ryanunitan3148 Жыл бұрын
I, however, would sooner support adding a third side than taking either side away.
@confusedowl297 Жыл бұрын
I've always liked that we have a two-sided flag though. If we do change it, I think we should still have two sides
@samsowden Жыл бұрын
@@confusedowl297 just flip the primary side around. attach the pole on the other side.
@PixelatedH2O Жыл бұрын
Recently my state, Utah, changed its official flag. While I don't especially dislike the flag it "replaced" I think the new simpler flag is much more modern and nice looking. It reminds me of the flag that I grew up with, the flag of Arizona, which I feel was designed ahead of its time.
@timdavis1874 Жыл бұрын
I take pride in my home state Arizona's flag - you see it reused and repurposed everywhere here in marketing, art and the like, which I think is a good heuristic for good flag design. I also love the new redesign of the Utah flag, for many reasons including what CGP Grey highlighted - hexagons are the bestagons!
@derpcade Жыл бұрын
I don't really like the new utah flag, but it is better than the old one. The SLC city flag is absolutely amazing, though
@scottanos9981 Жыл бұрын
Utah's new flag is based. You can actually tell it apart from other flags now. Mountains on a flag are awesome
@jordanjames2956 Жыл бұрын
I really dislike the new utah state flag. It looks like a cheap logo. I am from Utah to btw.
@ulfskinn1458 Жыл бұрын
Modern as in it looks like it was designed on a computer in the course of an afternoon.
@MitsyWuzHere Жыл бұрын
CGP Grey thinking that the Colorado flag is a bad flag because it has the letter C on it is an absolutely delusional take. I think a good flag basically just needs to be distinctly recognizable.
@ReddoFreddo11 ай бұрын
Exactly, the only good flag rule is that it should be distinctive, there's plenty of distinctive flags that don't follow those 4 other rules.
@barcotics188011 ай бұрын
and colorado definitely succeeds at that
@poilus10 ай бұрын
Colorados flag is awesome.
@thehammurabichode799410 ай бұрын
Something no one seemed to mention: The North American Vexilological Association's flag has a giant V on it!
@3ggshe11s10 ай бұрын
Yeah, he's kind of a rigid fundamentalist about the NAVA rules. I don't like Colorado's flag, but not because of the "C." The "C" is part of what makes it distinct. Which is Rule 5.
@heisensaul5538 Жыл бұрын
As an Ohioian, I think our state flag is really cool. Our state seal is sooooo generic and I'm glad we don't have a SOB flag. Our state flag is the only one that isn't rectangle shape :)
@RealJuiceWrld Жыл бұрын
Sublime rulez
@doomer8965 Жыл бұрын
There is also the Nepali flag 🇳🇵
@wta1518 Жыл бұрын
@@doomer8965 I didn't realize Nepal was a US state.
@circleinforthecube5170 Жыл бұрын
yeah but you also have toledo, give it back
@AN474-e1o Жыл бұрын
Rhode Island also isn't a rectangle.
@sempersuffragium9951 Жыл бұрын
I come from Slovenia, and we have a rather peculiar flag situation ourselves. We have for a long time had a national flag, that we wanted to adopt as our state flag upon independence. Just one problem - it was exactly the same as the Russian flag. So we stuck a small coat of arms on it and called it a day. But now there is a lot of mixed emotions about it: 1. it caused quite a controversy, when, at the height of the war, the Ukrainian government kindly asked our ambassador to remove it in case it were mistaken for the Russian one, 2. because it just so happens to be in the pan Slavic colours (completely coincidentally), which is a bit annoying, because our whole existence as a state is a total rejection of the idea of pan Slavism. But on the other hand, it has great historic connection to our land and people, it's the flag that was proudly flown upon our independence, and if you ask me, if I would change it... I don't know...
@mateus750 Жыл бұрын
Don't care about others' opinions, be proud of your own symbols!
@evanpereira3555 Жыл бұрын
It may be hard but I think a redesign of Slovenia's flag could be great. You should keep the tricolor as a base, but add symbol/color of the different part of the country (mainly littoral, Carniola and Stryia). And above give a greater importance and place to the coat-of-arm (or the replacement symbol). A simple solution could to be "Croatian way" (not 1:1 please) with coat-of-arm of the country and regions. I mean it's really sad that the best (imo) flag Slovenia got was the Home Guard insigna.
@DacLMK Жыл бұрын
As a Macedonian I would say don't change it. It looks great, and it perfectly fits with the Slovenian identity.
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
This is problematic for many new states. For example for centuries Bohemian flag was white-red, but when Bohemia was only a subdivision of of Habsburg monarchy or Czechoslovakia nobody really cared. But when Czechoslovakia split then for some time Poland and Czechia had identical flags with just different hues of red... so Czechia decided to revert to Czechoslovakian flag to avoid confusion. Also there is problem with Polish flag, because white-red vertical flag is used as international signal flag on sees. So we also slapped our coat of arms on the flag to use it on sees and called it a day. And because the coat of arms of Slovenian flag is so small it can fail the only thing flags are design to be - be easily recognizable from afar on a flagpole. Slovakia which has also identical white-blue-red stripes as Russia at least has a very big coat of arms and it is easier to mistake it for Russian flag. If Slovenia would base it flag on coat of arms of County of Cilly instead of flag of Duchy of Carnolia then Slovenia would have one of the most easily to distinguish flags in the word (e.g. something like this eu4.paradoxwikis.com/images/thumb/7/71/Cilli.png/330px-Cilli.png ). But current design just blends into all of the current Slavic flags. Also to be honest I am not really fan of bi- and tri-colour stripes, so I think that flag of my nation, Poland, is a little to bland and easy to mistake for something else. For example I would not mind if Poland would have as a flag rectangular version of this banner studioflag.pl/4026-large_default/proporzec-husarski-150x60cm-flaga-husarii.jpg but in current day and age putting anything similar to cross on Polish flag would probably end in a street fights...
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
@@DacLMK "As a Macedonian I would say don't change it. " Says the citizen whose country knuckled under the pressure and changed their flag. Dude, you guys had one of the *coolest* flags 30 years ago.
@zoopie_doop8957 Жыл бұрын
I just think the big issue with US state flags is how similar are the ones with seals on them look, considering most of them are also blue. More unique flags allow for easier differentiation and also can represent the state’s culture and people
@RickJaeger Жыл бұрын
Ironically, as i irately pointed out on the CGP Grey video, the "no words on flags" HURTS the goodness of seal flags, it doesn't aid them. like yeah, design-wise it might not be ideal, but shit, it benefits the flag's identifiability at a distance if it says WISCONSIN or VIRGINIA on it, doesn't it??
@andrewbecker1013 Жыл бұрын
@@RickJaeger So let's just get rid of all flags and just have country / state nametags? That's very dumb. And what about when the wind flies in the other direction?
@RickJaeger Жыл бұрын
@@andrewbecker1013 That's not what I said. I agree that's dumb, though. That's why I didn't say that. Because that would be dumb. So instead I said something other than what you just said. If you didn't read what I said, I suggest you do that instead of asking me about things I didn't say.
@zoopie_doop8957 Жыл бұрын
@@RickJaeger I think the best bet is when possible have flags that rely on recognizable symbols of the state, most people don’t know what each state seal looks like, but it is easier to associate single symbols instead. A lot of redesign concepts focus on that, like Pennsylvania having a Keystone or New York the Statue of Liberty
@RickJaeger Жыл бұрын
@@zoopie_doop8957 Yes, I agree that it would be *nice,* even *optimal,* for flags to be more distinct in obvious ways. However, that's ancillary to my point.
@mariatorres-by6du Жыл бұрын
As a European the rule about "no seals" or "complicated design" has always felt wierd. I'm from Spain, our flag has a coat of arms with tons of symbolism and I know plenty of other european flags that do too. The idea of not using anything complicated in a flag seems to me an estetic preference based on a few modern while ignoring the cultural context of (many) others.
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
I don't see that many European cities or regions that even fly flags, they might have a coat of arms on road signs and the town hall, but they don't actually fly a flag anywhere. If they want to put a flag up it'll be the national flag sometimes accompanied by the EU flag.
@theadjectiveform Жыл бұрын
The idea of not using anything complicated in a flag is because flags are intended to be seen from far away. You put a flag up on a flagpole for people to see. But the people are all on the ground. Putting things that they can't see in the thing you're putting on display defeats the purpose of displaying it in the first place.
@tirex3673 Жыл бұрын
Another European here, i think, there is a difference between a flag featuring a coat of arms, and over a dozen different flags all looking the same, except for the seal, a slightly different tone of blue, and maybe the name of the state in bold letters. Especially, when many of those seals are pretty complicated designs. As a german, there are 3 (out of 16) german states in the FRG, which have flags, that are just their coat of arms on the federal flag, but its fine, as its only 3, and of those, Lower Saxony is pretty distinct, as the coat of arms is just a white horse on a red shield and Rhineland-Palatinate has its coat of arms placed in the corner, leaving only Saarland with a more complicated coat of arms in the Center.
@sebastiano728 Жыл бұрын
I'm also from Spain. The thing about the principles is, they should be seen as guidelines. Spain's coat of arms is pretty complicated, but ultimately the point is that Spain's flag is very distinguishable, and I can more or less draw a simplified version of the coat of arms by memory.
@phantomplayz7952 Жыл бұрын
@@sebastiano728 i think that coat of arms and seals are ok on flags as long as you can draw a simplified version of the flag that is recognizable. I noticed the Turkmenistan 🇹🇲 flag was noted as bad in the vexology guy’s book because it has 5 traditional rugs on it. You can easily just draw a red line with the green background and moon and still tell its Turkmenistan
@Rob-cw5mg Жыл бұрын
Thank you for using the VA flag, as a Richmond native I've always liked my city's flag and the state flag. I mean who can honestly say their state flag contains a promise to kill all tyrants? I think that's badass
@jakej2680 Жыл бұрын
2nd best state motto, only to my state's: "Live Free or Die" :)
@Rob-cw5mg Жыл бұрын
@@jakej2680 that does go hard
@jakej2680 Жыл бұрын
@@Rob-cw5mg Original 13 states tend to have the best ones. I think we still have a tendency to get a bit fired up about the revolution. P.S. I took my mom down to Shenandoah NP for mother's day a few years ago. We visited Richmond on the way back on a whim, stopped at Maymont park and the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden, and drove around and admired the streets of Richmond. What beautiful places and what a beautiful city. We both couldn't get over how pleasant the downtown city streets and neighborhoods are. So, as a dirty yankee, some of my fondest memories will always be in Virginia and in Richmond! Not so much the traffic getting through DC though, that was literal hell.
@Virtusstrong Жыл бұрын
VA native here myself from the 757!. I personally love our state flag!, in fact I personally have a 3X5 flag in my room. The birthday of VA is coming up and I’ll be displaying it outside on a flag pole. My favorite aspect of the VA state flag is what the seal depicts from a historical standpoint for VA, and since you’re a VA native you know! “Sic Semper Tyrannis”
@Staggs2200 Жыл бұрын
And a little bit of skin is a bonus
@astra4518 Жыл бұрын
I come from Virginia, a state with a “SOB” flag design. I had been told that this design was chosen partly because, after the Civil War, flying a state flag seemed disrespectful to the American flag. Since it may come off as trying to put a state on the same level as the federal government. So, when states were making their flags, a trend was to keep them from looking too conspicuous. I have no idea if this true but I hope it is since it makes me feel a better affinity to my state flag especially one so lampooned online.
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
I learned this during my research as well and I regret not mentioning it. It's also one of the reasons why state flags were so long coming; there was this popular idea post-Civil War that "we only have ONE flag in the UNITED states!"
@reillycurran8508 Жыл бұрын
Kind of also explains a regional difference you might notice, states that were more to the north have SOB flags more often, and states that were more to the south tend to have more identitarian designs (there's also the accusation that those southern designs lift a suspicious amount of design elements from the Confederate flag, but that's a whole other can of worms.)
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough that is still the mindset in India, which is why there are no state flags yet, although a few years ago Karnataka almost had one.
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
@@ianhomerpura8937 Fascinating.
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
Even if the flag has coat of arms on a flag (in USA for some weird reason seals instead coat of arms) it shout represent something if you would make a version without coat of arms... In the USA you would have like 40 fully blue flags representing nothing. Seal is a seal, it has it symbols and it is used to stamp official documents. Coat of arms is a elaborate graphical representation of something, while flag is the simplistic representation of the most important ideas from the coat of arms and should be at least somewhat distinguishable regardless if you put coat of arms on the flag or not. Flag is meant to fly on a flagpole and give at least a minimal clue where are you... I would propose other test - remove coat of arms or seal from the flag, remove state name from the flag. If you still can tell what flag it is and what it symbolize than it passes a flag test. Otherwise why even bother with having flag? You already have a seal/coat of arms, just display it on something more rigid than a flag.
@SigmaWhy Жыл бұрын
Isn't it a problem that regular people don't love their state flags though? I've lived in New York and Chicago, and I've never seen a private citizen ever display a NY or Illinois flag even a single time. However, Chicago has a city flag that is considered popular and aesthetic, and if you walk around Chicago you'll see people displaying that flag everywhere - it creates a sense of identity and community there that other places lack.
@chedelirio6984 Жыл бұрын
Excellent point. A "Chicago" identity emerged with time more developed than a generic Illinois identity, and it's reflected in the adoption of an iconic symbol. As the video reminds us, other than places like Texas, most of the states did not have flags of their own that would be considered a flag "of the people" for the first century of the country: flags/ensigns were the colours of military units, and Great Seals were instruments *of the government".
@notabot5464 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I know JJ mocks the "souvenir" factor, but its real. I've lived in a state that had a SOB (New Hampshire), and now live in Tennessee. People in NH have great pride in the state, and we have a strong cultural symbol to represent that love, The Old Man in the Mountain. Nobody from New Hampshire flies the state flag, the only persistant symbol we have is a rock formation that collapsed twenty years ago. We love it, but its a dead symbol that is meaningless to future generations. TN's cultural symbol is its flag, and its alive: people love the design, they fly it proudly, they wear it on shirts, they have tristar bumper stickers. Its simple, its cool, and it will persist for generations. I wish NH could take the same pride in its flag.
@fish3977 Жыл бұрын
As a counter point, I'm a finn and I rarely if ever see the flag outside of "flag flying days" and most people who do fly the flag only fly it few times a year e.g. independence day
@coldwar45 Жыл бұрын
NOLA flag as well
@John-tb5se Жыл бұрын
@@notabot5464what makes me especially sad is that new england states have so much to work with. we have so much history and potential symbolism that would make for amazing flag designs.
@OptimusPhillip Жыл бұрын
Very good points. I'm personally still not a fan of the "seal on blue" flag for one main reason: distinctiveness. Even if a symbol is ultimately non-functional, I think it's important for a symbol to be easily distinguishable from other symbols, especially ones in the same category. And the seal-on-blue flags just tend to look the same. Basically, I don't think it matters whether a child can draw a flag, or whether it has words on it, but if your flag is hard to tell from another flag at a glance, I think changing it up a bit is a good idea.
@MateusChristopher Жыл бұрын
Flag still ugo
@GriffinDurtschi Жыл бұрын
One of the main problems I find with the “seal on bedsheet” flags are that they are not easily distinguishable. I feel that part of the job of these state flags are not to necessarily represent what the state is all about as much as it is to be easily identified as that’s certain states flag. The state seal is good for being more meaningful in the sense of showing what a state is all about, but flags are used to make groups identifiable and when all of the state flags look the same they fail at that purpose.
@OnlineVideoSurfer Жыл бұрын
I like this as a critique on the Internet flag obsessives. There is something dogmatic about a lot of aesthetic discussions online where simple design principles are treated as some unassailable truth, and that the belief in these artistic "rules" separates the savvy from the uncouth. This isn't just for flag design either. See also the "debates" on Comic Sans, or that Solar Sands video on Thomas Kinkade. Some of it almost feels like a politics of art, and in my opinion the worst adherents to these beliefs degrade the appeal and the potential of aesthetics itself. That said, almost nobody is flying the seal flags at a sports game, or buying them as a souvenir. And I don't think we have to lose the history, significance, or artistry behind many of the seals to recognize that the blue seal flags aren't working for most people as pop flag art. A redesign that uses the Ted Kaye "rules" OR better utilizes the seals OR does something weird and new would probably be an improvement for all of these states.
@JackRackam Жыл бұрын
JJ once again coming out with the freshest of hot takes
@nikhtose Жыл бұрын
Well, you don't see students in seal-on-blue-field states wildly waving their flags at basketball games. Not so in Maryland, whose flag is striking, distinct, and recognizable for a state that frankly is none of those things. Why we love it.
@Zekana0 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Maryland and ya, the flag was a very common site. I'd see people have em on their cars, have towels with the flag design on em at the beat, wear hats with the design. Its such a tacky looking mesh of design but that's what's great about it.
@billygoatgruff3536 Жыл бұрын
@@Zekana0 As a foriegner Maryland is my favourite state flag. It's so bright and unique and I absolutely adore it.
@mr.caretaker6086 Жыл бұрын
In regards to not having words on flags, my mind went to many muslim countries who put their declaration of faith on their flags. It means something profound to them even if it breaks the flag rule book.
@brandonk.4864 Жыл бұрын
But a few things: 1. The writing is large and short enough to be read from a great distance, in contrast to many of the mottos on the US state flags. 2. The writing is not written standardly. It is a special calligraphic style meant to be more aesthetically pleasing. That is not the case with the words on US state flags either.
@The_Midnight_Bear Жыл бұрын
I think it's dumb, BECAUSE it's sacred. Don't put holy things on places where it can easily or accidentally be desecrated, or where protesting the state might end up with you commiting blasphemy.
@theletterm1787 Жыл бұрын
@@chickenfishhybrid44authoritarians for instance
@nothingisawesome Жыл бұрын
the cultural and religious reasons are exactly what makes it different though.
@theletterm1787 Жыл бұрын
@@nothingisawesome it only makes it worse lol
@KrishnaWashburn Жыл бұрын
I'm from New York. I'm reasonably sure that nobody knows what our state flag looks like, but I think that New Yorkers have something better, which is the I Heart NY logo, which is immediately recognizable and all over every single souvenir. It doesn't follow all of the flag rules, but it comes close!
@alanlight7740 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing - New York may not have a memorable flag but it does have several memorable symbols.
@jonathanmong4927 Жыл бұрын
We should just make that our flag
@robertm39519 ай бұрын
@@jonathanmong4927 Such a flag would seem kind of fascist. The slogan is propaganda and individuals buy it by choice.
@ShawnRavenfire Жыл бұрын
I'm from Pennsylvania, and I love the design of our state seal (I even got a tattoo of it), but every time I see it on our flag, that pain blue background just looks wrong somehow, like it's incomplete or something... as if someone were planning on chromakeying the seal onto a really cool background, and just never got around to it.
@_jared Жыл бұрын
Growing up in Ohio, I always loved our flag. I certainly couldn’t draw it as a child (I wouldn’t remember the placement of the stars) but the shape felt distinctive enough. I don’t know if it is a ‘good’ or ‘bad’ flag, but I really couldn’t care less. I just love it.
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
Do Ohioans often fly it? The shape seems challenging to mass produce
@buddyhimself Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough I really only see it flown in Columbus or maybe by businesses in a downtown of a smaller city. That" Donald Trump as Rambo" flag is much more common to see in any hour-long trek through Ohio.
@_jared Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough It was much more common for me to see a miniature version, like the sort of thing you’d hand out at a parade.
@edgyanole9705 Жыл бұрын
It's usually considered a great flag because of it's distinct shape
@riversidepark4107 Жыл бұрын
It’s common in Columbus but less so in other cities, you might be more likely to find the “pride” variant or miniaturized souvenir versions elsewhere. Columbus’ two pro major sports teams incorporate the flag into their logos too so that helps too. I think this is more of a byproduct of Cincinnati and Cleveland having a lot of civic pride and their own well designed and popular flags than difficulty producing and finding an Ohio state flag.
@stevennelson9504 Жыл бұрын
I live in Minnesota, one of the states with a SOB flag. We had an incident where the state flag over the capitol building was put up upside down and went unnoticed for some time. I believe any flag should be distinct and recognizable from a distance. Minnesota did set up a committee to come up with a new flag design by next May. We shall see what happens.
@k.williamjones3978 Жыл бұрын
Hi, I also live in Minnesota. Part of the issue with our present state flag is that there is too much "going on"; it is thought, as the poster said, a flag should be "distinct and recognizable from a distance." Right now, it isn't. But here in Minnesota, as in a number of other states, the issue of white colonialism vs. native and indigenous people of the era is on display. Too many state seals, and therefore the flags, indicate the "victory" of whites over native folk, interpretations of history from the 19th century.
@sternshadowdude219 күн бұрын
@@k.williamjones3978 Why should we care about the natives? They lost.
@k.williamjones397819 күн бұрын
@@sternshadowdude2 You're joking right?
@OutSiNsBigCoolChannel Жыл бұрын
Another day, another banger. The most frustrating part of the CGPGrey video is how there are clearly flags he himself likes that he rated lowly for breaking the "rules" (basically everything between the FS and FB tiers). This includes the Californian flag, which is very much iconic, recognizable, beloved by the community, etc, but got rated as FA for having text.
@nicholai1008 Жыл бұрын
The other thing I found really frustrating is that he ranked Alabama Higher than Florida (because they’re the same flag except Florida has a seal), but Floridians love their flag and actually use it whereas Alabamans seem to be somewhat indifferent towards theirs. The funny thing is that I’ve probably seen more University of Alabama flags around than I have state flags. Those are “bad” Flags, and yet they seem to enjoy more use.
@fish3977 Жыл бұрын
California could be an easy S but the text (and to a much lesser degree the overt detail) drags it to b or c
@ShadowWizard123 Жыл бұрын
That part bugged me, too. The flag of California is easily one of the most iconic in the entire nation. I wouldn't change a single part of it.
@thomastakesatollforthedark2231 Жыл бұрын
@@ShadowWizard123okay but is that because of the design or because it is the epicenter of much of American media?
@ShadowWizard123 Жыл бұрын
@@thomastakesatollforthedark2231 it is absolutely the design. It's cool as hell
@lukeporras1288 Жыл бұрын
As a fan of flags, I’ve actually been leaning this way towards SOBs lately, and I’m glad I’m not alone. I think there is value in preserving many of these old flags, because people tend to forget that they are tied to the history and traditions of their respective States. I’m a fan of at least retaining old SOBs as official “government flags” so that they continue to fly alongside any newer flags.
@Theolis Жыл бұрын
I would have never thought people would think Virginia's flag was bad, it seems like it could be pretty iconic for us. I'd honestly think of it first as a symbol for our state then even the Virginia is for Lovers thing, that I don't know how I even conjured up from the depths of my memory just now.
@matthewstorrs7084 Жыл бұрын
My issue with the "Seal on a Bedsheet" flags is less due to the supposed "Ugliness" (I'll admit I'm not a big fan of their aesthetics, but also acknowledge that this is a subjective thing, and not any sort of objective reason that they are "bad"), and more due to, as you say, around half the states having such a flag, meaning that, especially at a distance, they all kind of blend together. Perhaps I'm spoiled since I've mostly lived in states that have very colorful and/or distinctive flags (the three states I've lived the longest in are Maryland, Ohio, and Arizona), and so that's the norm that I personally think of when it comes to state flags. While it's obviously not a priority to do so, having fewer "Seal on a Bedsheet" flags overall would help keep them distinctive, and I think might help quell at least some of these arguments overall.
@Moonlitwatersofaqua Жыл бұрын
I've seen flag nerds go after those aforementioned states. Maryland obviously because its so busy. But Ohio, Arizona, and also Colorado often get called ugly a lot even though they are distinctive and are liked by the people who live in those states. I wonder if this sort of snobbery is why JJ is taking suck an extremist stance.
@MattMcIrvin Жыл бұрын
@@Moonlitwatersofaqua Yeah, those four are all REALLY GOOD flags, and quibbling with them over some list of rules is truly ridiculous. I actually think Arizona's is almost as good as New Mexico's, which is often considered the sine qua non of a good state flag.
@Moonlitwatersofaqua Жыл бұрын
@@MattMcIrvin I actually like Arizona's flag more than New Mexico's. Blasphemous I know. its a taste thing. And people should really learn to understand that. As an Ohioan who loves the Ohio flag, I've noticed a lot of people complain about its weird shape while in the same breath saying Nepal has one of the best flags. It confuses me.
@EnderDeveloper Жыл бұрын
@@Moonlitwatersofaqua When have Arizona and Colorado been criticized? It is almost like a requirement to like our dear Arizona’s flag to be considered a vexillologist, since I’ve never heard anyone criticize it.
@EnderDeveloper Жыл бұрын
@@MattMcIrvin New Mexico has a good flag, but I hate it for its controversy. The Zia sun symbol is displayed on the flag. It is displayed on sacred ceramics which may only stay with the pueblo. And the designer was inspired by…guess what? A likely stolen piece of Zia ceramic outside of the pueblo in a museum in New Mexico. Plus, the sun symbol may only be used with permission from the head of the Zia. Can you guess if the New Mexico flag’s designer asked the Zia for permission to use their sacred symbol? Of course the designer didn’t ask the Native Americans! And the New Mexico flag is displayed everywhere today after being adopted, from license plates to, ironically, portable toilets!
@jj947 Жыл бұрын
JJ declaring war on CGP Grey I see
@Kibannn Жыл бұрын
Maryland though 😍
@karl7428 Жыл бұрын
@@Kibannn Maryland = best american state flag
@tlachers5 ай бұрын
@@karl7428mid flag Texas infinitely better
@sollamander2206 Жыл бұрын
I think there could be an argument for busier flags that break the minimalist rules of Kaye, but I think it's pretty self-evident that the seals on a bedsheet flags aren't great symbols that people identify with. There may be a couple of exceptions, but the flags I see people display are overwhelmingly the non-seal on a bedsheet types. Maryland's flag is complicated but I saw it displayed more in New York than the New York flag.
@alanlight7740 Жыл бұрын
The B.C. flag may be too complicated for most people to draw from memory, but at least it is distinctive enough that no one is going to mistake it for anything other than perhaps some British-Uruguayan friendship organization. And it's still not nearly as intricate as one of the seals. That said, there is one major technological reason to want more distinctive designs: flag emojis. It's going to be very difficult to distinguish all those seal on a bedsheet flags when they're shrunk down to emoji size.
@calebdume582 Жыл бұрын
We people in maryland actually celebrate our flag a lot- it's very popular and iconic down here. The history behind it is pretty cool too, dating back to the barons of baltimore and the civil war.
@oliverrainer5771 Жыл бұрын
Fellow Marylander here. Yeah, it's one of the few things we got. We're kinda vanilla here. That and crabs. Still the best flag in the union though
@gfox9295 Жыл бұрын
@@oliverrainer5771 you've also got... The Wiiiiiire. (and a pretty cool aquarium downtown)
@oliverrainer5771 Жыл бұрын
@@gfox9295 Baltimore Aquarium is so good!
@gfox9295 Жыл бұрын
@@oliverrainer5771 indeed! my family lived near Philly for a few years in the 90s and we several times made the drive down I-95 to Baltimore to go there, it was simply the best one around!
@karl7428 Жыл бұрын
Maryland has one of the coolest flags of any american state in my opinion. Cali, texas and maryland are the best
@MAD0C96 Жыл бұрын
As a Virginian I feel a great deal of attachment and pride for our flag. The symbolism is badass, and it has a booby!
@gcb345 Жыл бұрын
@@TheUltraBall8675 Also as a Virginian, I disagree with your statement. Set the boobies free, I say.
@alyssasmith8980 Жыл бұрын
Virginia is definitely an exception to the rule
@wyyyve Жыл бұрын
Can we just use a non blue background, why do all the backgrounds neeed to be screen of death blue.
@1000eau Жыл бұрын
I'm not virginian and I generally dislike seal on a bedsheet flags, with the exception of the virgininan one, exactly for these reasons
@samsowden Жыл бұрын
@@TheUltraBall8675 unnecessary does not negate awesome
@jake2011rt Жыл бұрын
I remember my Tennessee History class in middle school (twenty years ago) spending a great deal of time explaining our flag and seal. We learned about the Tri-Star's (flag) symbolism of the unity of the "Three Grand Divisions" of the state. Likewise, we were taught about the seal's representation of Tennessee's unique heritage of shipping and commerce (up and down the Mississippi via Memphis) alongside the same of its agriculture. As a rule, I think most Americans undervalue their home states (except Texans, who overvalue theirs). I have generally noticed, however, that there is a sort of North vs South divide in this. It seems to me that more Southerners are overtly proud of their home states (and their respective symbols) than Northerners.
@PierzStyx Жыл бұрын
I imagine that divide is a lingering effect of the powerful cultural differences that birthed the Civil War in the first place. The North and the South developed strong and divergent forms of nationalism that led to two different parallel cultures developing, which made secession easy to accomplish.
@LiquorWithJazz Жыл бұрын
Wearing a blue shirt is such a great choice for this video! Thank you for adding the complexity and getting us out of the echo chamber.
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
Liquor, thanks for pointing that out. I didn't even notice, but you are so right.
@davekuhn9342 Жыл бұрын
Your contrarian streak is why we love you. Never lose it JJ!
@voglitheum6064 Жыл бұрын
As a Virginian I can’t help but notice the prominence of our flag in this video. I enjoyed cpg greys video and actually agreed with some of his points, but afterwards I saw on twitter an example of a redesigned flag for Virginia and I was repulsed by all of the designs. Virginia as one of the oldest institutions in British North America whose government history goes far beyond the founding of the USA. It would be a real shame to “culture wash” that rich history and symbolism of its origins simply for a supposedly good flag.
@willisilikefood9492 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if you're talking about the same flag design that I'm looking up on Google, but the first result looks really good in my opinion (The one with the sword going through the crown). And it has some nice symbolism. And the second result(Basically the same as the current flag with the state seal, but with a design instead of just navy blue on the background) looks great too if you're looking to keep the seal.
@肉骨粉 Жыл бұрын
When content is transferred to a different medium, it needs to be modified and tailored accordingly. Flags that just bear a seal are almost as absurd as a U.S. flag adorned with the entire text of the declaration of independence.
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
That would be a cool flag!
@jacobbeaulieu2675 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough ever the contraian 😂
@pascalausensi9592 Жыл бұрын
Saudi Arabia disagrees
@wesleycanada3675 Жыл бұрын
Saudi Arabia works because from a far it looks like a solid bar of white
@MattMcIrvin Жыл бұрын
Blue field with a round seal containing the entire script of Bee Movie in microscopic print
@SulfuricDonut Жыл бұрын
I think the most common function for a flag nowadays is to appear in a tiny icon next to an athlete's name at a sporting event. It's definitely the case that when watching the olympics, some flags pop out as distinctly "good" because they are identifiable even at the tiny emoji level that gets printed on screen. That's where things like text and complex geometry tends to ruin things. This pops up in Canada when you have the "coat of arms" flags of most provinces that are pretty much indistinguishable at small scales, and would be better symbols with just the coat of arms itself, which are on their own pretty cool.
@obansrinathan Жыл бұрын
It’s only really Manitoba vs Ontario that that’s a big issue with. Since Manitoba is a better province I think Ontario should have to change its flag.
@Gammapod Жыл бұрын
This was interesting and helped me understand why the state flags ended up that way, but I'm left feeling that there's no contradiction between that history and the arguments of the people who don't like the bedsheet designs.
@parkeryoudontknowme1516 Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you made this video because what CPG Grey said about the South Carolina flag can never be forgiven
@sarahjones7954 Жыл бұрын
Personally, I still don't love the SoB flags, but I really liked learning about your take specifically. I think for instance, the Maryland state flag which definitely falls under that super complex category is beloved despite breaking the flag rules, kind of discredits serious following of these rules. I think of even some of the state flags and a not blue background (for example Washington state is green) would help people be able to tell them apart and become a symbol people would be proud to have.
@FroyourHistory Жыл бұрын
People take the 'flag rules' from Good Flag Bad Flag too seriously, even when I was younger I saw them more as guidelines than hard and fast rules, since even well-liked flags didn't abide by them. (like California) This reminds me of how online the Japanese prefecture flags are worshipped, but I don't want all flags to be hyper-minimalist logos on a flag. If the US flag were designed today online vexillologists would probably complain about how complicated it is. I think that a focus on historical significance/heritage matters as much if not more than a slick design. Taking notes from heraldry like Maryland did would probably be a good start.
@Powerman293 Жыл бұрын
Modern internet flagsperts if the US flag was designed today would say that it very clearly breaks the "Must be able to be easily drawn by a child" rule because drawing all the stars would make it too hard for kids. Or some BS like that.
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, those Japanese prefectural mon have been present since the 1880s. So after the war, they just simply used the mon they've been using for decades, and then used them in flags.
@PeruvianPotato Жыл бұрын
Fr lmao. Even back when I made my video on flags, I just found it ridiculous how Redditors take those flag standards as seriously as the Bible. Then again, I just think coat of arms look significantly cooler than the same bland shapes you see in every "flag suggestions"
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
@@PeruvianPotato they could have done something like the flag of Mexico though. Just the seal in its exquisite beauty, not everything.
@Moonlitwatersofaqua Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I feel like flagsperts want everything to be a tricolor. I remember cgp grey recommended this artist who made redesigns of all of the 50 states flags to have a uniform theme of red white and blue and followed all of the rules. It was so boring to look at.
@מ.מ-ה9ד Жыл бұрын
Here are the rebuttals to your rebuttals: 1) Seals are great. But as seals. The American states has both a seal and a flag. The seal would have the exact (or almost the exact) same significance even if it won't be on the flag. The seal of Virginia, for instance, has no reason to represent both the official seal of Virginia AND the state flag of Virginia. 2) The functional purpose of a flag IS important. For example, when you cross the border from Vermont to New York you would like to know where Vermont ends and NY starts. Even the "esthetic preferences" you claimed are important. When you see a flag in your TV on the background, you would like to know what state the person that is speaking, represents. 3) And most importantly, THOSE ARE NOT RULES. Those are guidelines that it would be better to consider and understand the meaning behind them before describing a flag. They aren't really supposed to claim what's a "good" or "bad" flag - they are just demonstrations to why and how certain flags fit better to their practical and emotional purposes than other flags. Keep in mind, that *you do not have to strictly and uncompromisingly follow all of them them to have a good flag.* That video of CGP Grey does not represent the vexillogical community well, to say the least. There are plenty of other popular repressions like r/Vexillology, the video of the YT channel Artifexian about flag design, or the YT channel Vexillographer.
@abelb.7997 Жыл бұрын
So the document titled Good Flag, Bad Flag is not meant to imply that the examples they give are good or bad? And when it claims to lay out "five basic principles" of flag design, it doesn't really mean "principle" as the way the Oxford or Mirriam-Webster dictionaries define it but just as optional guidelines? Seems like either the authors meant exactly that, or they chose their words very poorly.
@EnderDeveloper Жыл бұрын
@@abelb.7997 Yes, they are guidelines. There are always exceptions, but NAVA’s guidelines are created to help you in designing a good flag, which may still be regarded as good even if it doesn’t check all of the boxes in the “principles” given in the booklet.
@arnoldszwarzenegger6832 Жыл бұрын
Issue is that these guidelines are just bad lol. Brazil is one of the most recognizable and beloved flags out there and it has multiple colours and text on the flag.
@מ.מ-ה9ד Жыл бұрын
@@abelb.7997 The author is not the head of the Vexillogical community. Not to mention that spesific book is only small part out of NAVA itself, and it is a shame that all the critics never mention all the other and way more nuanced and detailed commission's reports. In short, that book is never taken alone among Vexillogists and it is only one source.
@מ.מ-ה9ד Жыл бұрын
@arnoldszwarzenegger6832 That's because Brazil's flag follows perfectly all the other guidelines, and the small text of "ordem e progresso" is pretty insignificant and usually invisible compared to those. BTW, that guideline was made exactly because you will never be able to read that on an actual flag, and it loses its meaning. The flag of Greece, for example, has a text in it, represented in a very good and clever way. (And obviously, because it's one of the biggest and most populated countries on earth...)
@d0ntfeedphil447 Жыл бұрын
As a Californian We will never remove "CALIFORNIA REPUBLIC" from our flag.
@GoofusPlays Жыл бұрын
We literally have the best flag
@aAtom596 Жыл бұрын
California is fine having words on its flag because the rest of the flag is so good. It balances out.
@EnderDeveloper Жыл бұрын
@@aAtom596 Exactly! Plus its very symbolic and Californians are very proud.
@jesusmanuelsotomeza73 Жыл бұрын
As a Californian, I personally wish we did because the STAR represents the former Republic (even if it only lasted 3ish weeks) and the bear represents California (even if we drove it to extinction). Adding “CALIFORNIA REPUBLIC” is simply redundant and defeats the purpose of a flag since it basically says “hey we know we aren’t recognizable by our flag which is supposed to easily identify us so here’s our name written out instead”. In all truth removing the words from the flag wouldn’t change its appearance that much and at long last we’d have an arguably perfect, symbolic, nonredundant flag.
@bruhbutwhytho Жыл бұрын
@@GoofusPlays🧢
@Neckrollios18 Жыл бұрын
I've thought that its kinda fun to look at these overly detailed seals and pick out the small meanings within them. Im originally from one of those states and we did an activity on our state flag in elementary school. So im for them as well, JJ.
@josephkroszner3596 Жыл бұрын
I agree with a lot of that. I live in Pennsylvania but my main gripe with the fact that half the states have a deal flag is that they are so similar it’s hard to tell them apart at a quick glance since most of them share the same color background
@brandon.05 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you in the sense that if a flag is complicated that doesn’t make it bad, but I just think there’s a reason that places with Seal On Blue flags like South Dakota or Oregon don’t ever use their flags for public display. I will give exceptions to Pennsylvania and Louisiana though because they actually have decent looking symbols being using in their flags.
@Jonas_M_M Жыл бұрын
This might be the peak of Internet contrarianism; the history of seals is underappreciated though.
@Gallic_Gabagool Жыл бұрын
Yeah JJ just cant resist I feel.
@johndotto2773 Жыл бұрын
Just being contrarian for the sake for being a contrarian.
@ダニエル-x5d Жыл бұрын
It really isn't even contrarianism. Ironically, most of the "flag community" knows very little about the actual history or function of flags, and JJ demonstrated he knows more than them.
@xgladar Жыл бұрын
@@ダニエル-x5d no he pretty much just glossed over the function of flags to present how seals used to be more important and that somehow makes seals on flags okay...
@ThatOneREDScout Жыл бұрын
The seal thing is actually really interesting, it makes me kinda want to see a whole video on, like, the way other nation's subdivisions, like, make official documents. If it's the same stamped seal like in the US, or if there are unique trends for them that are different from that.
@philagelio336 Жыл бұрын
It might be worth pointing out that the basic design outline for the American Flag was approved in June of 1777, so the flag question was solved much faster than the Seal question. Edit: One more thing, the Great Seal of the United States features a shield with 13 stripes and a blue rectangle, basically some of the basic elements of the American Flag, so the seal couldn’t have existed without the flag.
@RunstarHomer Жыл бұрын
As a Michigander, I have to say, I do have a fairly heavy sense of pride in my state, and I have oft wished for a flag that I felt was more representative of the things I love about Michigan, and one that was not so similar to the flags of other states. But I had no idea of the historical significance of the seal. I still think I'd prefer something different, but I have a new appreciation.
@weareone1575 Жыл бұрын
While I think you are right that dogmatically applying these rules is silly, it’s also very obvious that most state flags are boring and unmemorable. I think most people agree with this, and the principles do give you a good sense for why, even if they are imperfect. I’d say the rules are useful to understand flags, but not to apply dogmatically (kind of like music theory). Maybe less accurate or useful than music theory, but I think its a decent analogy.
@OptimusPhillip Жыл бұрын
Right off the bat, I'm happy to see the Maine flag in the intro. We get so little attention, it's always a fun surprise when I see a mention.
@henryterhune8328 Жыл бұрын
I'm enthusiastic about the potential change. I would really like to be able to distinguish our flag at a distance, I think the original flag is a good design, etc.
@masond7573 Жыл бұрын
Maine is my favorite state to visit, it's underrated
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
Maine is a weird one though. You guys already had one of the best flags. Why did they change it to a generic blue flag with a seal still puzzles me.
@OptimusPhillip Жыл бұрын
@@ianhomerpura8937 It's a mystery to me, too.
@speedypichu6833 Жыл бұрын
Not about state flags, but I also feel this about country flags, I mostly think of El Salvador along with the rest of Central America. I have seen people say they wish the flags were more distinctive, which while they are not, there are bigger issues the countries have to worry about than what the flags are. Along with that, the flags do mean something, in this case most are based on the Central American Federation, which was a short lived state in the area.
@bruhbutwhytho Жыл бұрын
We just need to bring the union back, that would solve the flag problems.
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
And how it fell was not so pretty
@alejaan6778 Жыл бұрын
The flags is central America are distinct and easy to tell apart except for Nicaragua
@gregorysmith3341 Жыл бұрын
I have always loved the medieval look of the state flag of Maryland. It would not be out of place borne into battle by mounted knights. So, modern designers: piffle to you.
@mackenziedinel4855 Жыл бұрын
As soon as I saw the title I thought “Hey I saw a CGP Grey video about this recently.” Interesting to see different perspectives
@thykota Жыл бұрын
Vexillology enthusiasts when I ask them to mention a single visual language principle other than those five rules:
@xSimonTan Жыл бұрын
Ted Kaye when he sees the South African flag (it has more than 5 colors, he's about to have an aneurysm):
@vidcas1711 Жыл бұрын
@@xSimonTanThe funny thing that most people forget to mention is that in Good Flag, Bad Flag, Ted Kaye states that it’s okay to break “the rules” if it’s for a good reason, and states South Africa as a good example of this. He also calls them “principles” as opposed to rules.
@acerebral_ Жыл бұрын
Getting so tilted by people brainlessly parroting Good Flag Bad Flag that you wrap back around to promoting flags that literally do not function as flags (indistinguishable from a distance) is way dumber to me tbh. This guy could've avoided this entire video just by looking at anything other than an intentionally simplified pamphlet ("Guiding Principles of Flag Design" also by NAVA comes to mind,) but it's easier to nitpick a very literal interpretation of GFBF and put the dumbest possible opinion in the title as clickbait I guess.
@drewpamon Жыл бұрын
I think distinct at a distance is important. Nothing worse than trying to find your state flag amongst a field of blue.
@Vykk_Draygo Жыл бұрын
I don't think it is. Is there any case where it's necessary to identify a state flag from a distance?
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
@@Vykk_Draygo I would say 97% of the time one sees a state flag it's in the state itself. So this business about having to "distinguish" them seems like a bit of a non-issue.
@stephengray1344 Жыл бұрын
@@Vykk_Draygo If a flag is flying on a flagpole then it can only really be seen from a distance. So you're really asking whether it's necessary to be able to identify a flag that's being flown. I'd argue that if people can't identify a flag then there isn't any point to flying it in the first place
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough I checked, and it's actually only 95.8% of the time, so you may want to reconsider. /s
@1Psyblade1 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough I think this is a bit of a chicken-or-the-egg situation. Were state flags to be distinct from each other, I think it'd be way more likely that people would find it fitting to present a collection of state flags, such as per-state in the Senate or something like that for example. By contrast, if someone was making a map of the USA, they might opt to not include the state flag alongside the labeling of their names for the precise reason that many flags are indistinct, especially if shrunk appropriately to fit alongside a labeling on a paged map. In other words, I think we'd be more likely to see the state flags outside of just their own state if the flags were distinctive from each other. But because many are not, we do not.
@michaelwells529 Жыл бұрын
Speaking as someone from Utah, a state who recently change from its SOB flag, I’m really happy we changed it. Even as a kid I didn’t really like it, and it almost felt like we didn’t have a flag at all. I couldn’t connect to it in the same way I could the US flag. I was always jealous of all the other states with flags that were more distinctive. Your BC flag is a “bad” flag sure, but it’s distinct. It’s very British Columbian, and clearly there’s a an emotional connection between its people and its flag. You never see that in Utah. But now we have a new flag that does feel very Utahn to me and people have already started flying it, putting it on bumper stickers, etc. I’ve never seen that before with the old flag. It still honors the old seal, with the beehive, the most recognizable part of the old flag, and the only part anyone ever cared about it
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
But the republicans say it’s woke!
@AduckButSpain Жыл бұрын
The seal is, of course, still the exact same seal
@sarahereach Жыл бұрын
Regarding the British Columbian flag being a "Bad Flag" from the simplicity perspective, I would posit that it is approaching the "Maryland Point" meaning that what it lacks in sophistication and class it more than makes up for in distinctiveness and cultural relevance. So bad it's good, so to speak.
@michaelwells529 Жыл бұрын
@@sarahereach I agree, I don't even think its that bad honestly.
@michaelwells529 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough LOL Luckily most everyone I knew was excited about the change. Love your videos!
@TrueSchwar Жыл бұрын
My one complaint has always been, “make it recognizable from a distance or at a glance”. This stems from not being able to point out my state’s flag when around a bunch of other state flags. I’d prefer to remove the seal, probably because I’ve been bashed over the head by “the rules” one too many times. But even if the seal is kept, at least make the flag distinct.
@aarfeld Жыл бұрын
Thank you for holding up my state flag at the end, there. I quite like it a lot. In the middle of a blue sea lies the state seal, a Roman plebeian slaying a king, with the motto: "Sic Semper Peratas," "Thus Always to Tyrants." Pretty cool, me thinks.
@Nathandelange Жыл бұрын
He is declaring war on the entire flag community and I love it
@netgnostic1627 Жыл бұрын
🤔 and I thought he was declaring war on the ANTI-flag community 😁
@Nathandelange Жыл бұрын
@@netgnostic1627 to be fair theres not really a difference
@ダニエル-x5d Жыл бұрын
Good. Ironically, most of the "flag community" knows very little about the actual history or function of flags.
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
@@ダニエル-x5d tell me about it. Ironic really
@Nathandelange Жыл бұрын
@@ダニエル-x5d it’s more of an excuse to judge
@weldin Жыл бұрын
I agree that the “flag community” has gone too far, and I think CGP Grey has had a really negative impact (despite being a fan myself). However, I do think that a lot of state flags are just outdated and don’t really represent their states well. Like you said, they’re mainly decorative objects, but the seal does not fulfill that purpose at all. 100 years ago it might’ve made sense to put the seals on flags since it was much more commonly seen and actually had a history in the state, that’s not how we really use flags today. They provide a sense of identity to a lot of states, and the states that have seal flags usually go somewhere else. Pennsylvania has a lot of symbols used, like the keystone or the Liberty bell, but no one flies the flag because it isn’t distinctly Pennsylvania. I think it’s reasonable for people to want something they feel represents them more than a 250 year old seal that looks more like something on a government document than a decoration for their front porch or coffee mug.
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
I do agree with that. At the time it was more of after thought because how much rare flags were flown now as it very easy to make and mass produce. People want more simple designs and way to say Hey I'm from this or that state
@alexmammoth2916 Жыл бұрын
For me it's about design. I did graphic design for so long that these clash with successful designs. Simple works best. You can appreciate the history of something, like the seals, and still find them to be needlessly complicated. If the Michigan flag at the Capitol building in SLC almost no one would notice. If you did the same with their basketball team logos people would lose their minds.
@warron24 Жыл бұрын
A lot of people on the internet are enthusiastic about graphic design and I think that's where a lot of this enthusiasm for flag stuff comes from. It's fun to take a critical eye towards design. But I find it a little grating to be honest. Flags aren't corporate logos and they don't need to be treated like logos.
@karl7428 Жыл бұрын
@@warron24 To me, a seal is much more like a logo than a normal flag is
@geo34568 Жыл бұрын
My issue with your point on seals is that no one supports abolishing seals, it’s just that seals *typically* do not belong on flags as they serve different purposes. The US states that don’t have Seals On Bedsheets are also the ones most proud of their flags, and it’s been like that for a long time. And I don’t think the aesthetic principles are Eurocentric as you say, many Non-European national flags for example like Japan, Nepal, Turkey, etc. are older than European ones and they still fit into the design principles. It also can be said that “the flag rules” weren’t meant to be rules that must always be followed, but flag *principles*, they are meant to be a guidelines, not laws. As the author said, “Design principles are guidelines, not rules-they help designers create flags that will be effective, widely adopted, and loved. In some cases it makes sense to depart from the guidelines to reach a creative, compelling, or politically acceptable solution.”
@notoriouswhitemoth Жыл бұрын
I like your vexillology videos, they're how I discovered your channel, I also enjoy your videos about pop-culture history. The purpose of a flag is to be easily identified (specifically, easily differentiated from other flags), from a distance, through a crowd. They were originally used by armies as a way to organize themselves. Most of these are not fit for purpose, they're similar enough to register as more or less identical in the situation flags are for. What makes a good flag is being able to tell which one represents your specific cohort at a glance, in a place where there are dozens or hundreds of other flags. It's meant to be a portable landmark to help you navigate in a crowd.
@SylviaRustyFae Жыл бұрын
As an Oregonian, im always annoyed that our flag gets lumped in with the rest of the seal flags when ours in fact has a beaver on the back; but no one ever looks at the back of our flag, they just write us off bcuz the front was designed by committee The back of Oregon's flag is actually super awesome bcuz if you look at it the right way, you can see a turtle instd of a beaver on a log. Its one of those illusions, unintentionally heh
@realhawaii5o Жыл бұрын
I'm from Portugal. I live in Estonia. Both countries have interesting and very different flags. But that doesn't matter because US states' Seal on Bedsheet flags are terrible.
@SeanA099 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your use of Virginia in the thumbnail. It’s definitely one of the better flags with state seals
@WilliamHostman Жыл бұрын
Fundamentally, the very idea of flags is to display armorial bearings. Ted's rules are fairly well grounded in Heraldry The rules for heraldry are equally simple: It should be identifiable across the battlefield It should have high enough contrast to enable this, resulting in the "No metal on Metal, no Color on Color" (see note below) It should avoid unneeded clutter, noting that repeating patterns don't count as clutter. Ideally, it should be able to be recognizably drawn by a herald overwatching the battle with a lack of skill at drawing. It should be unique to the owner. Good reference, if one can wade through the mighty tome, is Sir AC Fox-Davies, The Art of Heraldry. It discusses the history of flags.
@Neotenico Жыл бұрын
I worked a couple years in graphic design making signs and from that perspective of "I was trained to use graphics as a medium to get people's attention and make something stand out," I'm decidedly not a fan of seal flags when they have no distinguishing factor aside from the seal (aka all the flags that just have a navy blue background). For example, as a Delawarean, I see our flag as very recognizable from other flags because we used a lighter shade of blue and put the coat of arms (which is the same design as the seal but without a border) over a yellow diamond in the center. Those two features are unique enough that you could line up every official flag on the planet and I would be still able to pick Delaware's out quickly and easily. So I don't necessarily have an issue with the seals themselves, but the design around the seal could be improved from a solid navy blue background.
@-gemberkoekje-5547 Жыл бұрын
Theres a reason why the Chicagoan flag is 9000% more popular then the Illinois flag. And it isnt because folk from the city feel more comerodery with eachother then the whole state. The Californian flag is 9000% more popular then the Los Angeles flag. Good design is good design. And if I see a seal on a bedsheet flag waving in the USA I wouldnt know what state I'm in or what state this flag is representing. But if I see the Maryland flag, I immediately know whats up.
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
It might also be because people are prouder to be from Chicago than Illinois.
@-gemberkoekje-5547 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough Thats where the California point comes up. And Maryland also doesnt have mutch state pride but the flag is still relatively popular.
@syro33 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough I'm not sure if having a "good" flag really makes people more proud of the place, but i think it might give people a way to express it easier? In my state, Utah, I know there's a lot of people that are proud of the state, but I've never seen someone that had the flag outside of like, schools and government stuff. We did change ours recently though, and i have seen a few of the flags flying around. I think it gives us something to latch onto to express that pride that we had before, but didnt show as much.
@Crow7878 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough With all the books, TV shows, movies, games, and especially all the music that probably at this point has paid homage to every single street in New York City yet how people don't care about the flag, I think it really is as simple as a visually-unappealing flag being sufficient to kill pride in a flag. I think that if the one of the most sentimentalized cities in the world can have this problem happen to it while a frequent target of deprecation by the city's residents such as Chicago still has a beloved flag, I think we can pretty conclusively say that whether a flag's design is something people find visually-appealing is in fact probably sufficient to create a sentimentalized flag and not accomplishing that just de-facto condemns the flag to obscurity. Not to put too fine a point on it, but I think perhaps the fact that a hit song like "Empire State of Mind" whose music video oozes love for the city showing-off landmarks, people, art, architecture, the skyline, and the sights of the city in general, yet not once does that flag ever once appear. It might be a bit of hyperbolic tangent, but since I just re-watched the video for "Empire State of Mind" and remembered the line "Long live the World Trade," while the VIdeo showing images from the 9/11 Memorial and Museum, I will mention that when firefighters were at ground zero digging through the bathtub for survivors and recovering the dead, when they wanted to put-up a symbol of their pride in the face of adversity, they didn't once think to grab the New York City flag or New York State flag too while they were at it, they only went for the American flag. The other flags were frankly emotionally-disconnected from the actual people it ostensibly represents. Also, I get that it might seem conceptually weird to ask why firefighters would care so much about the city's flag when this was a national tragedy, and that is a fair point. However, I shall circle back around to how great the Chicago flag is. The quite beloved Chicago flag is also quite prominently used by the Chicago Fire Department alongside with the US flag because the flag of Chicago is not just a great flag but one whose symbolism includes a homage to the Great Chicago Fire, so it makes way too much sense that already such a great flag would be quite prominently used. The New York City flag is farther from the minds of New Yorkers than the country it mostly pays homage to. Perhaps it is because the design is really boring and you need a flag that can visually stand-out first and foremost? Perhaps it may be that New Yorkers have better things to be proud of that this flag symbolism is simply so old that it is completely irrelevant to anybody? Perhaps it's some combination of both? It might even be a combination of the two (though I still suspect the former is probably the bigger factor). No matter the case, the flag is frankly going to have to be replaced whole cloth to create something visually-appealing and symbolically relevant in order to create a flag which will actually connect with New York City..
@karl7428 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough Then why is it that, seemingly, all the people that are most proud of where they are from just happen to have better flags? isnt it far more likely that people are more willing to show their local identity if their flag looks good? i think you're putting the cart before the horse here a bit
@jl696 Жыл бұрын
I learned a lot from this video. It gives me a better appreciation for my former state's flag (New York). I moved to Colorado and this state mostly abides by the newer flag recommendations except for the big letter "C" and yellow dot "O" in the middle of it. Colorado always does its own thing, even with its flag.
@JJMcCullough Жыл бұрын
The Colorado flag is okay, but I think it looks very 70s and very corporate. It clearly doesn't have a lot of history behind it.
@lion2699 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough i take grave offense at that! hyperbole aside, from the colorado general assembly website: "The colors of the flag symbolize Colorado's geographical features: the gold symbolizes the state's abundant sunshine; the white represents snow-capped mountains; the blue symbolizes clear blue skies; and the red represents the color of much of the state's soil. The flag was adopted on June 5, 1911, by an act of the General Assembly." some other sources claim that the c also stands for 1) the nickname of "the Centennial state" because it became a state 100 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and 2) columbine the state flower. however, those two sound clearly sound like they were added after-the-fact.
@samanteater Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCulloughI disagree with the thesis of your video but I will say that people hate the seal flags so much that they're willing to call any state flag that doesn't have them good even when it's something as stupid as "we put a C on the flag because Colorado starts with a C".
@KanyeTheGayFish69 Жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCulloughand yet it’s one of the most iconic flags
@henryterhune8328 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your acknowledgement that the most significant problem with seal flags is that they inspire very little attachment and enthusiasm. As a Mainer I feel tremendous love for might state, and abject apathy for my flag. I like our seal, even, but on a flag it is disappointing and anonymous. I do, however feel prude towards our original flag, which is progressing through the legislature to potentially become the oficial flag again.
@kokopoppers Жыл бұрын
“A hate, which I am sad to say, I once mindlessly participated in but now feel a need to push back against” is the defining quote for my 30s.
@HelenIGuess Жыл бұрын
My main issue with seal on a bedsheet flags is that they don't allow for distinction between them. For example California has a flag that breaks several of the "rules", but I personally way prefer it to other flags, because even without the text clarifying it's California, it's unique enough that it's easy to pick it out from a line-up. I guess in my opinion it's not necessarily whether a child could draw it from memory, but whether a child could recognise it among other flags. But overall I did really enjoy the video and learning about the history behind these flags, even if I don't necessarily agree with the conclusion.
@markdouglasphd Жыл бұрын
Changing a flag is a symbolic way of saying that you are moving on from the past, and I admire that Tennessee, Mississippi and others have done that (and come up with beautiful designs). Flags are for people alive today, not in the 1700s.
@xandercruz900 Жыл бұрын
Tennessee? >Changing a flag is a symbolic way of saying that you are moving on from the past Uh....why is that a priority? Your flag has no more meaning than the passing design of an iPhone has until you are "bored" with it. Flags take years (generations) to build meaning, and events both tragic and triumphant, recorded onto it so that it actually has meaning beyond just that "I like it because it looks cool".
@bruhbutwhytho Жыл бұрын
@@xandercruz900if your flag represents part of your history that you aren't proud of it makes sense to change it.
@xandercruz900 Жыл бұрын
@@bruhbutwhytho No it doesn't, because then your flag needs to change almost every 10 years based on some groups dislike of some aspect of your (place's here) history. There would be NO flags then! If your flag represents part of your history that you aren't proud of...then it also can represent PART that you are.
@pascalausensi9592 Жыл бұрын
@@bruhbutwhytho The ex soviet republics are a great example of that, as every single one changed their flag upon gaining independence for very obvious reasons (Belarus is the only exception, but that is in itself a quite meaningful statement. Edit: even they changed it slightly, altering the ornament pattern and removing the hammer and sickle and star).
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
@@pascalausensi9592 Belarus actually changed their flag to the 1918 red-white-red Pahonia flag back in 1991. Then Lukashenko ruined everything and brought back the old Soviet era flag in 1995, because of the stupid premise that "the Pahonia flag was used by the pro -German collaborators" etc.
@parkmannate4154 Жыл бұрын
The blue seal on a bed sheet flags are just boring and indistinguishable. And that's like 20 of them. They aren't "bad" per re they're just so samey it's hard to get behind them.
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
Look at Japan Same issue with ultra minimumism designs that has a history that's great but when you look at multiple it looks the same
@parkmannate4154 Жыл бұрын
@@monkofdarktimes I was thinking about it an I think it'd be kind of neat it every state did a Seal but with a state appropriate color or colors
@SloppySpleenSplatter Жыл бұрын
As a Washingtonian I love our flag even though it's "S.O.B.". What better way to represent Washington than with a big 'ol portrait of him? Plus our background is green instead of blue, so we get to stand out from all the other S.O.B.'s despite doing the exact same thing everyone else did. And the flag "rules" would disqualify Maryland, which imo is the best state flag of all.
@Ian21Ibarra Жыл бұрын
Took me a while, but I finally found a comment defending our flag, I absolutely love the shade of green
@stargate4625 Жыл бұрын
Bruh, just cut the crap and make your flag a dollar bill
@Ian21Ibarra Жыл бұрын
depends if that would move it up or down CGP Grey's tier list
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
Ignore the tier list and so called flag rules and use it as a guideline
@BonaparteBardithion Жыл бұрын
I've always been annoyed by the seal in the middle because George Washington has nothing to do with the state's history outside of being the namesake. And the state was only given that name because politicians didn't want the proposed name of Columbia (named for the river) to be mixed up with District Columbia - and then the popular name for D.C. became Washington. I love the green, and I like the other colors incorporated in the seal. Green for the woods, blue for the sea and mountains, gold for the fields. If we took George Washington out of the flag entirely and just used those same colors for another design it would be perfect.
@DerekHardwick Жыл бұрын
JJ's point that flags are simply 'decorative objects' falls flat for me. Sure nobody is fighting under the banner of Iowa, but in 2023 they are (or can be) a form of state branding / marketing, which is important. Some of that branding may be tradition (Coca-cola has a pretty outdated branding style that they would be insane to ditch since such a huge part of their brand is it's timelessness), but not always. There are many written and unwritten 'rules' for branding, but brands break them all the time. One rule that defeats the purpose of breaking, though, is recognizability. That's where my personal criticism of the 'seal on a bedsheet' flags come from, you can't tell them apart, and they're difficult to emotionally attach to. They're a missed opportunity, in that sense.
@C_B_Hubbs Жыл бұрын
This is the main point that needs to be made in this comment section.
@jostincolon-velez551 Жыл бұрын
Think the main problem with SOB flags is that they all blend together. The flags of these states can use some parts of the seal or coat of arms as inspiration. An example I can think of is Pennsylvania Keystone flag which uses the colors from the coat of arms and makes it unique to that state. Think it’s good that many states are changing the design to represent iconic symbols of their states, like Mississippi and Utah as some recent examples.
@Noah-ws8ho Жыл бұрын
I think that the design of "seal" flags is precisely what limits their functions so greatly. Where simpler designs exist that follow the mentioned rules, they are often a more prominent part of the culture and tend to get used much more often. The best exmple here being the Texan flag. The rules certainly aren't universal but they certainly aren't without purpose. For example; a flag that is easy to draw is also easy to remember. The Colorado flag is something most people would be able to recognize at glance. That serves the same purpose as a good logo for a company; it helps keep the thing it represents in the minds of people which is helpful for tourism, immigration etc... Or if you just want a quick hand visual symbol to make reference of your thing in some context. It is also excellent in garnering national unity of any kind. The quebec flag is often used to reinforce Quebec national identity, for example - which is possible due to its easily recognizable design, and would certainly not be possible with many of Canada's other provincial flags. Ontario for example ignores their provincial flag in favour of the trillium to fill all similar roles. Might as well use that as the flag anyways, then, if that's what you'll be seeing. The american flag in fact is not easy to draw. But it *is* very rrecognizable, which again, I consider the most important aspect along with nice aesthetic. I'd say the same about British Columbia. It is recgnizable. The sun, the wave stripes. Few elements - all of them a prominent place. Ontario, as said, barely is distinguishable from Manitoba at a glance. That makes a terrible symbol to rally around. While the seal flags clearly are better at more elaborately describing the history and culture of what they represent, I disagree that they don't serve a practical purpose. If designed for such, a flag can serve as a unifying symbol internally and improve outside recognizability of the subdivision it represents - and if it fails to do so, new symbols are often created to fill the role regardless.
@Brambrew Жыл бұрын
"They're more what you'd call guidelines than actual rules." ~Barbossa
@johnforgrave7125 Жыл бұрын
Another important factor in what led to the state flags we have today was the Civil War. There's the obvious ways that it affected flag designs in former Confederate states, but it's also the reason so many former Union states created or redesigned their flags to be more reminiscent of their regimental flags from the War. It's also why so many flags have seals on the same (or similar) Union blue. Since it became a trend a lot of other states created similar flags as they were founded, though the Western states definitely tend to have more variety. I have also heard that many states struggled to come up with a flag design that their state legislature would agree on, so the SOB design can be seen as sort of a safe compromise. Sort of the muzak of flag design... Inoffensive at the expense of originality.
@ecurewitz9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the interesting rebuttal on flag design. Gives me something to think about