In the world of comics, Tony Stark is known as one of the most well-prepared heroes to suit up and battle bad guys. When you ...
Jeffrey Goldberg was accidentally added to a Signal group chat used by senior officials in Trump's administration to discuss ...
The new collection of MLB hats from New Era has caused quite a stir online. The Texas Rangers have already removed their cap from the online team store, and more teams have followed suit.
NEW YORK - This turned out to be a defining weekend for the Rangers, but not in the way they were hoping for. Sunday's 7-3 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets at Madison Square Garden was indicative ...
Employees at the Portland plant reportedly bypassed mandatory hardness tests and entered false results for approximately 12,800 armor plates of various types. These plates were marked as tested and ...
A unique, new line of MLB hats for fans displays a team’s uniform logo with its hat logo superimposed on top of it in the center. The mishmash of letters created a different word altogether ...
Take, for example, the Texas Rangers hat. By superimposing the Rangers’ “T” logo over its “Texas” wordmark, the hat appeared to be labeled with a vulgar Spanish word used for women’s ...
The Texas Rangers’ Overlap hat went viral over the weekend when fans spotted the Spanish word the design accidentally created and the link to the hat’s product page now redirects to the ...
Welcome to FTW Explains, a guide to catching up on and better understanding stuff going on in the world. Have you seen some stuff about a Texas Rangers hat from New Era that's caused a bit of a stir?
That includes one that was whipped up for the Rangers that is no longer being sold after someone realized it was emblazoned with a vulgar Spanish word. Most apparel companies that have a merchandising ...
A number of teams' hats were stylistically flawed, but the Rangers' cap was worse — it spelled out a vulgarity and was pulled from circulation. Here is more on why the Rangers cap will not be ...
After a monumental mess-up involving a vulgar Spanish word, New Era — a sports merch brand — pulled a Texas Rangers baseball cap from online store shelves. The cap — which superimposed ...