Ever Since I was 10 years old and saw a t-shirt with the cast of “The Simpsons” made to look like “The Sopranos,” I knew t-shirts were my calling. Today, I am the proud owner of Whack-Eyed Tees, the most cutting-edge t-shirt shop in all of Venice Beach, but Iâm just getting started.
I need to grow my humble little hut into an empire and to do it, Iâm going to need some help. Iâve decided to partner up with someone from the most successful group of people I know, the cast of HBOâs “Succession.”
After a lengthy interview process, Iâve ranked every character from the hit financial drama by how much they can bring to the T-shirt hut game:
53. Grace
This woman shows up, briefly alludes to having a kid with Roman, and then vanishes from existence. I need people who are going to be on time, not disappear from reality.
52. Ewan Roy
Dude was offended I even approached him. âYour entire enterprise is the exact sort of hollow, pedantic, lowest common denominator drivel eroding the human spirit like a cancer from the inside, all in the name of the almighty dollarâ were his exact words. We sell t-shirts, bro, chill.
51. Jeryd Mencken
With the exception of Roman, the overt Nazis on “Succession” are low on this list, and Jeryd Mencken is the lowest of the low. This dude dismissed someone for crying at their fatherâs funeral, heâs not someone I want to see when I stroll into work on molly.
50. Alessandro Daniels
His entire marketing strategy was that I should call my dad? I donât even know my dad.
49. Marianne Hirsch
She spent the whole interview telling me I need to strategize, but she wouldnât strategize with me! Then she told me I need to talk to Ewan some more, and that guy hates my ass. Sheâs out.
48. Nan Pierce
Weirdest interview ever. She stared at me making passive-aggressive small talk the whole time as her staff brainstormed and printed a shirt design. Then her maid handed it to her and then she handed it to me and said âThis is my shirt that I made.â
47. Ray
All we know about Ray is that Logan once told him to piss in a bucket and he thought Logan was serious. I donât know if he was intimidated or heâs really that literal, but either way, he doesnât have what it takes to make my t-shirt shop the top on the boardwalk.
46. Lukas Matsson
Matsson sent in some physical prototype shirts wrapped in a very fancy package, but unfortunately, they were terrible. One was a shirt with the Teletubbies with dicks on their heads instead of shapes and the word âNot Teletubbies.â The other just said âGay.â He also sent me some blood?
45. Peter Munion
I donât know where this guy gets off. He spent the whole interview asking who else I knew on the boardwalk and saying he would love an introduction like I owed him something. Screw him and his cheese knobbies.
44. Maxim Pierce
Imagine what an incompetent pariah you need to be to wind up playing second fiddle to Connor Roy.
43. Tellis
The dude’s only previous job experience was at The100, a company that never got off the ground. Pass.
42. Mark Ravenhead
Markâs shirt design was a swastika, and he spent the whole interview telling me that it was a Tibetan swastika that had nothing to do with the Nazis.
41. Sylvia Ferreyra
Willaâs Mom spent the entire interview walking around the shop and announcing how she planned to redecorate. Did you know our vinyl press station would be the perfect spot for a chaise lounge?
40. Sophie and Iverson Roy
Kendallâs kids decided to work together as one creative team. Unfortunately, all their design pitches involve dead rabbits and parental neglect. Either of those subjects can be funny, but these kids just donât have it.
39. Michelle-Anne Vanderhoven
The failed White House press secretary to t-shirt hut pipeline is more significant than you think, and it doesnât usually work out for anyone involved.
38. Rat Fucker Sam
The boardwalk t-shirt shop game is a competitive, cutthroat world. I thought I could use his skill set to dig up some dirt on my neighbors over at âTee Myself and I.â Unfortunately, his design pitch, a shirt featuring a cartoon rat with an enormous human penis and no caption, was terrible. He could be an asset, but only if I keep him in his lane.
37. Rava Roy
Her pitches were all plays on âLive Laugh Love.â âLive Laugh Divorce,â âLive Laugh Chardonnay,â âLive, Laugh, Overreact,â etc. Kinda played out, Rava. Youâre too online, and mostly Facebook mom groups from the looks of it.
36. Tom Wambsgans
Tom may have âwon the successionâ and heâs a company man through and through, but he brings absolutely nothing to the table creatively. He did offer to go to prison for me several times, but unless he can deep fake himself in that video of me setting fire to âBeach Tees and Beyondâ Iâm going to need to keep exploring other legal strategies.
35. Connor Roy
Connorâs pitch: A cartoon drawing of Napoleon with a visible erection captioned with âNapoleon Bonerapart.â He emphasized that the length and girth were â100% historically accurate.â Not the issue Con.
34. Sandi/Sandy Furness
You would think a father/daughter team would be relatively wholesome, but no. The t-shirt design pitches that twisted old man whispered to that woman to relate to me were some of the most depraved things Iâve ever heard in my life. There was one involving a catheter and an orphanage that will haunt my nightmares forever. We like to be edgy at Whack-eyed Tees, but the things this man wanted to print would get us shut down and possibly arrested.
33. Lawrence Yee
10 years ago Lawrence would have made the top of this list in a heartbeat, but heâs a little too stuck in the VICE era to make it in todayâs t-shirt game.
32. Daniel Jiménez
If this guy couldnât beat Jeryd Mencken in an election, how is he going to help me push out those yahoos over at Patriot Tees?
31. Frank Vernon
âI went for three jobs, I didnât get them, my vineyard was a write-off and now my trophy wife is sucking some waiterâs dick in Palermo and all I got was this lousy t-shirt.â Make that four jobs Frank, weâre passing.
30. Hugo Baker
Hugoâs inept opportunism is the opposite of what we need, and his t-shirt pitches left something to be desired as well. One was a dog with his face saying âWoof Woofâ and another had a pilot script for a zany sitcom starring him printed all over it.

The Usedâs seventh record âThe Canyonâ is almost universally known by the groupâs fans as a meh and way-too-long misstep for the band, but 2017 itself had a huge gaffe and was doomed from the start being that it was Trumpâs first year as President of the United States, which seems to have really worked out for him. Anyway, this is The Used’s sole effort produced by nu-metal paladin Ross Robinson, the record doesnât get repeated spins over and over again, but it still has some solid tunes.
2012âs âVulnerable,â The Usedâs fifth studio album, is the bandâs first non-major label LP effort and hit stores almost exactly ten years after the four-pieceâs breakout debut. While it is (wait for it, wait for it) a VULNERABLE-in-the-best-way overall listen, and âI Come Aliveâ is a hell of an opening track, the remaining eleven songs sadly arenât in the same league overall, and provided the act with less of a chance to shine. Itâs hard for any band with such an expansive catalog to consistently wow everyone, but âThis Fireâ and âNow That Youâre Deadâ are both literal bangers and silver medal song entries even though, as Ricky Bobby said in a different fashion, âSecond place is the first loser.â Still, you should check both of those tracks out again, and immediately thereafter shake/bake!
Real talk that may cause force without violence: âCryâ is the bandâs best post-major label single from 2010-the present day, and weâre not taking any further questions on the matter, as our love is not a battle, itâs a ticking time bomb. Yeah. 2014âs âImaginary Enemyâ is The Usedâs best Hopeless Records release, and despite the fact that you didnât realize that the band had a song newer than 2004âs âAll That I Got,â it even charted at number one on the Independent albums chart. Thatâs not make believe! Said stat probably caught you off guard as youâre so deep. In closing, this album is also longtime guitarist Quinn Allmanâs last with the band.
This album from The Used definitely has the bandâs best LP title and album cover. âToxic Positivityâ has a solid flow front-to-back and features a diverse array of tones and textures throughout its eleven fruitful tracks. Speaking of the word âfruitful,â thereâs nothing toxic about cherries unless youâre allergic to them. The prior sentence makes sense (as well as so many other brilliant ones here) if you deep dive into the bandâs colorful catalog, which is so much more than strictly blue and yellow. Sky. Pee. Toxic positivity. Easter eggs are great for our headspace. Anyway, this album is the bandâs shortest full-length, with no individual song being longer than three-minutes and thirty-five seconds, so if a particular tune offends you, and we know that at least one or more will for you punk rockers, you can make it through the rest quite quickly instead of giving up.
There were two eras of the early part of the pandemic (or plandemic if you nasty): The oft-forgotten-like-his-character-in-âCastaway” Tom Hanksâ self-quarantine period in Daniel Johnsâ Australia, where The Used vocalist Bert McCracken currently resides, and the impossible-to-erase-from-your-mind-no-matter-how-hard-you-try rise of Netflixâs incomparable sleeper hit âThe Tiger King’.’ 2020âs âHeartwork,â the bandâs best non-major label release, was released shortly after the big, wanna-be Joe Exoticâs original âcountryâ music caused the internet to have a permanent bloody nose from the metaphorical accident known as his two LPs. What a weird time to be alive! In closing, âHeartworkâ is current guitarist Joey Bradfordâs debut effort with the band, and the four-pieceâs first for label Big Noise.
Fun fact: The band originally wanted to work with Weezerâs extremely lovable/hateable/revered/doomed frontman Rivers Cuomo on their fourth album âArtwork,â but ended up not exactly settling with platinum-and-then-some-producer Matt Squire for this one, the bandâs first non-John Feldmann production effort. This eleven-song record is without question the bandâs best sans Feldy, and their most underrated body of work altogether. Sadly, it seems that this albumâs then-label Reprise Records showcased that they were born to quit just as the album cycle started, as the band had a chance to release only one single from âArtworkâ before the suits quietly gave up on the other ten songs and the entire LP as a whole. We suppose that the relationship between Reprise and The Used was meant to die a short and painless death after a lucrative run, but there will be forever blood on the hands of the conglomerate label. You cigar-toting bigwigs with no semblance of taste know who you are!
Lunacy fringe from us: For the next three LPs listed, we donât recommend skipping ANY tracks, so read on, loser. The Usedâs second album âIn Love and Deathâ is their biggest seller to date, but itâs set in stone in the bronze medal spot here, and could stay a while. If you feel differently, your opinion is wrong. That blunt posit wasnât hard to say, and moving forward, you need to update yesterdayâs feelings with more quality control. Anyway, if you were at a tour date for this record in the fall of 2004 with The Bronx, Head Automatica, and Atreyu opening like we were, you were both on the right side of the bed and history. This frenetic-in-the-best-way album was eventually reissued with an Adam Lambert feature on a My Chemical Romance cover with Bert Bowie, but smart and astute readers like you already knew that.
This oneâs a ripper: 2007âs âLies for the Liars,â The Usedâs third studio record and first without current Rancid drummer Branden Steineckert, is a extremely diverse and beyond solid introduction to the band for those who missed the first two LPs for whatever reason and/or were born after Alana âHoney Boo Booâ Thompson. We stand by our 100% factual opinion that this record is their second most underrated just after its follow-up âArtwork,â and hope to find a way for you to feel exactly the same about this non-subjective point of possible but unjustified contention. The record sounds like it utilized the biggest budget allotted to the band over the course of its twenty-plus year career in the best way, as it sounds HUGE AF and so, so lush. The four-piece pulled out all the stops on this one, thatâs for sure! Time has been kind to this album as it still holds up like the next-to-be-mentioned AND kills.
A post-9/11 concert trump card was witnessing The Used open for H2O as direct support and Box Car Racer in the headlining slot on their only fully national tour. If weâre being honest, itâs a daring, daring move to have your debut album be a self-titled one, but The Used excels in Wordâs bold and italic fonts. This may get us canceled, but so will everything that we say and donât say: The Usedâs 2002 LP known as âThe Usedâ is one of the best debut rock albums to be released this century and that wasnât meant to be funny. If you have any further questions, youâre gonna have to ask nicer than that.
God, what havenât I tried?! I was a flying drone guy, a guy whose always working on his truck, a guy whose always talking about buying a boat, I even watched college rugby for a year. None of those hobbies really reflected the hollowness I feel inside at all times.
I grew up in a community with a really thriving hip-hop scene. I struggled to fit in because music and words never interested me. Then I noticed all of the hip-hop people wore shoes and I was like âHey, I can do that!â Now, everyone calls me âThe shoe guyâ and Iâve had sex more than once. Life is pretty great.
A significant relationship with another human being. Next Question.
Oh, I have a ton of other interests, I just like wearing expensive kicks as a status symbol. Plus Iâm earnestly a huge fan of inflated overhead costs and barbaric child labor.
Vintage. Air. Jordans. Iâm just gonna keep repeating that until you go away.
Funny story actually, I used to be obsessed with model trains. One day I asked a store clerk where the trains were, and he thought I said âtrainers,â as in sneakers, and I was too shy to correct him, so I now I do this.
Before my sneaker obsession, and you might wanna sit down because youâre not even going to believe this, I was a DJ!
Technically Iâm also a father, but Iâm non-practicing.
Cocaine. It just wasnât expensive enough.
Oh, Iâm still a lot of other things. Iâm an entrepreneur, an obsessive-compulsive, and a stalker.
Playing basketball. I was never very good at it, except for the part where you buy the shoes, so I leaned into that.
Look, I know it’s lame, but this is the least violent way my neurosis can manifest itself so just let me have this.
BEST: Cancerslug
BEST: 36 Crazyfists
BEST: Gatecreeper
BEST: Pallbearer
BEST: Testament
BEST: Cephalic Carnage
BEST: Hatebreed
BEST: Foreign Hands
BEST: Death
BEST: Mastodon
Originating as a project to cheer up Mike Watt, we guess you could call this their, thankfully brief, concept album phase. Itâs essentially a one hour long tribute to Madonna where even the self-deprecating moments feel congratulatory and the cringe is seemingly endless. Listen to this one and youâll see why they didnât release it under their own name.
Can you still be punk while creating deep, melodic tracks? No, of course not. Donât be stupid. So, with âBad Moon Rising,â Sonic Youth began to cast off the shackles of genreism (is that a word? If not, can we get credit for creating it?) and began defining a unique sound that would inspire post-grunge about 10 years later. Okay, maybe thatâs not such a good thing.
A certain clout-chasing writer for a website we wonât name here tried to boost his profile by giving this album a zero. While by no means in the upper echelon of Sonic Youthâs body of work, the review was an obvious publicity stunt that conveniently overlooked the fact that SY had to start from scratch after all their customized gear was stolen. And we all know when your gear is stolen so is all your creative energy. Itâs kind of like when a witch curses you.
Look, not every debut album can be [Donât forget to add iconic debut album of highly influential band.] This one is their most rooted in the No Wave scene that they emerged from and, thankfully, left behind. Thereâs an almost sinister sound to this one. Maybe too sinister. Like, hey, my life might be in danger, kind of sinister. But of course this was back when you had a not insignificant chance of getting stabbed in the Lower East Side of New York.
This one feels like Sonic Youthâs most introspective work and I guess thatâs kind of fitting for their penultimate album. While they wouldnât break up for another five years, this one has an âAbbey Roadâ type feel to it in the sense that you get the sense that theyâre all kind of sick of each other. Had we listened to the lyrics a bit more closely, perhaps weâd have caught on that Thurston and Kimâs marriage was in trouble.
Fun fact: âKim Gordon and the Arthur Doyle Hand Creamâ was originally named for Mariah Carey, but they had to change it for legal reasons. Weâd like to think Mariah wouldâve been cool with this given her appreciation for alt-rock that Ed Templeton liked to use in skate videos, but this was coming not long after âGlitterâ so you can forgive her for not being in the best headspace for playful ball-breaking.
SYâs second album for Geffen and first post-“Nevermind” isnât bad per se, but feels more as if Sonic Youth is trying to replicate the bands that they inspired rather than the other way around which is why itâs not ranked higher. Check out the Spike Jonez-directed video for â100%â to catch a pre-movie star Jason Lee skateboarding.
When released, we werenât aware this was going to be Sonic Youthâs final album as of the time of this publication and it received average to good reviews. Much like David Bowieâs âBlack Star,â this one is worth reevaluating and is much better than the tepid reviews of the time will have you believe since most critics, not us though,, suck at life. This was also the only album featuring Mark Ibold as an official member of the group.