Croc O' Shirt Explained

Croc O' Shirt was a line of apparel marketed by Mad Dog Productions, mocking the Lacoste shirts in the early 1980s. The brand's name was a pun on the phrase "crock of shit" and its logo was a deceased Lacoste crocodile lying on its back.

Croc O' Shirt was introduced in late 1980.[1] As Mad Dog Productions CEO Barry Gottlieb put it, Richmond, Virginia, where he was based,[2] "...was 'the heart of prepdom.' 'First, there were Izod shirts,' he says. 'Then you were seeing the alligator on socks and pants and belts, just everywhere. One day I was sitting in a bar with my girlfriend, and I said, 'You know what I`d like, a shirt with a dead alligator on it.'"[3]

Sold primarily through mail order, the shirts were a hit with "anti-preppies," with reported sales in 1983 of $300,000. In 1982, Lacoste filed suit against Mad Dog Productions, claiming trademark infringement. The lawsuit garnered publicity worldwide.[4] The suit was eventually settled out of court, allowing Mad Dog Productions to sell the shirts for another year, through July 16, 1984. In the end, Gottlieb sold 90,000 Croc O' Shirts at $14.45 each, for a total of $1,300,500 in gross revenue.

Other Mad Dog Productions products

Mad Dog Productions went on to release other novelty items:

Other activities / later developments

In the 1980s, Mad Dog Productions also managed a few Richmond-area new wave music bands, including Suzy Saxon and the Anglos.[9] Gottlieb's label Brat Records released the group's debut album, Guilt by Association in 1984, as well as a couple of follow-up albums.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Gottlieb organized the annual "Richmond's Tacky Xmas Decoration Contest and Grand Highly Illuminated House Tour," which was covered by, among others, NPR and Bravo.[10]

Beginning in 1995, after moving to San Francisco, Gottlieb became a published humorist, writing a weekly column, Doing It Doggy Style, which was published in such newspapers as the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Francisco Examiner, the Chicago Tribune, the New York Daily News, and the Boston Phoenix, His audio commentaries were aired on the Pacifica Radio Network.[11]

Gottlieb has published a number of books, including:

Notes and References

  1. News: Leaping Lizards! A Lawsuit Puts Life Into a Dead Alligator. Don . Nunes. May 17, 1982. The Washington Post.
  2. News: EARL THE DEAD CAT BORN OF CREATOR'S NEED FOR PET. Brian . Moss. New York Daily News. Chicago Tribune. Feb 7, 1986.
  3. News: DUKE OF EARL IS A KID AT HEART WITH A BENT FOR THE BIZARRE . Jim . Spencer. Chicago Tribune. April 29, 1986.
  4. Trademarks: Mad Dog on the Run. https://web.archive.org/web/20070714080359/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,951203,00.html. dead. July 14, 2007. 18 Jun 1984. Time.
  5. News: UPI ARCHIVES. Oct 13, 1983. 'Horse Shirt' brings suit. United Press International.
  6. News: Agreement Reached in Suit Against Maker of Polo Shirt Spoof. The Washington Post. June 11, 1984.
  7. News: Here, Kitty...Kitty??!?!. Stephanie . Mansfield. December 21, 1985. The Washington Post.
  8. Web site: Earl the Dead Cat. Mad Dog Productions. Jan 14, 2024.
  9. Web site: A compendium of excellent counterfeits . Jardin, Xeni; Hall, Vann . August 30, 2007 . .
  10. Web site: Grand and Highly Illuminated: The mother of all tacky lights tours began with a bright idea . HARRY . KOLLATZ JR.. Dec 13, 2019. Richmond Magazine.
  11. Book: Skywriting at Night" Editorial Reviews: About the Author. 0738821152 .