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by elmin
3530 days ago
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You're wrong because we all get the joke, and are over it. It's a very conscious branding choice to label themselves as counterculture and edgy. It won't appeal to everyone, but it clearly is a conscious marketing choice, and you'd have a hard time saying their marketing isn't going well. I think your time would be better spent telling MetRx or Ensure to change their names, considering they are brands which are not very successful at capturing the market Soylent is dominating (the bottled-nutrition-by-choice market). As far as I can tell their only issue is quality control and customer communication, changing their name wouldn't fix either. |
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Or, well, no. Yep, Schiit is our name, and it's pronounced, well, like "hey man, that's some really good Schiit!" And now that we have your attention..."
Sorry. I believe "nomen est omen" and I personally believe that until they update their name they have it baked into their DNA to lie to, to mislead, and to create an awful dystopia. It is quite literally on the label.
Compare the origin of the term Ycombinator: [2]
We might disagree on this but I am going to maintain that when your name clearly embodies some ideal, however vaguely, it affects things.
Why are there no restaurants called Makesyapuke Diner? (or anything like it.)
They need to align their name with their positive vision. They've outgrown the joke.
[1] http://schiit.com
[2] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/93526/what-is-a-y-combina...