Branding Memes

Posts tagged with Branding

If Great Scientists Had Logos

If Great Scientists Had Logos
Corporate branding for scientific geniuses? Now that's what I call evolution of marketing! Each logo brilliantly captures their work—Pythagoras with his triangle hidden in the A, Newton with an apple dropping through spaced letters, and Einstein's famous equation as his signature. My personal favorite is Heisenberg's, where you can't simultaneously know both the position AND momentum of that "g". Schrödinger's logo would've been both present and absent until you looked at it. Just imagine these legends fighting over merchandise royalties instead of academic recognition. "Sorry Darwin, but my Archimedes bathtub toys are outselling your finch plushies this quarter!"

Chemistry Branding Catastrophe

Chemistry Branding Catastrophe
The marketing department clearly skipped chemistry class. "C₂O" would be carbon suboxide—a highly toxic, flammable gas that smells like rotten fish and definitely not what you want in your refreshing tropical beverage. If coconut water actually contained C₂O instead of H₂O with some electrolytes, we'd have a lot fewer Instagram influencers pushing hydration trends and a lot more emergency room visits. Drink up! Nothing says "wellness" like a compound that spontaneously polymerizes at room temperature.

One Letter Substitution Reaction

One Letter Substitution Reaction
When chemistry meets wordplay! The left bottle shows "PANTYNE" instead of the correct "PANTENE" on the right. It's the perfect example of nomenclature gone wild - like someone accidentally substituted a tyrosine amino acid where there should be glutamate! The chemical difference between Y and E is just one methyl group away from brand disaster. Whoever did this clearly understood the principle of chemical substitution, just applied it to the wrong laboratory!

If Great Scientists Had Logos

If Great Scientists Had Logos
Corporate branding meets scientific brilliance! Each scientist's "logo" cleverly incorporates their key contribution or discovery: Pythagoras with his triangle theorem, Archimedes with his lever principle, and Copernicus with his heliocentric model (sun at center). Newton's apple of gravity fame, Darwin's evolution tree, and Einstein's mass-energy equivalence formula. Democritus (atoms), Euclid (parallel lines), and Leibniz (calculus integral). Gödel's incompleteness theorems, Faraday's electromagnetic induction (the "day" in red like a wire coil), and Bohr's atomic model. Pauli with his exclusion principle (no two electrons in same state), Heisenberg's uncertainty (the question mark), and Feynman's diagrams. Borlaug's wheat genetics, Watson & Crick's DNA structure, and Goodall represented by her primate research. Honestly, if these were real merch, I'd buy the entire collection faster than a quantum fluctuation. Science department budget meeting: "No, the logo redesign is NOT frivolous spending!"