The Los Angeles Rams have a new logo, not the Los Angeles Chargers. This is a factual statement that must be remembered despite what your eyes will show you in the rest of this post.
On Monday the Rams officially debuted their new logo, which uses the concept of a ram’s horn and keeps little else from its past designs.
Here’s the full slate of new designs, if you need them. They’re all basically bad.
The Rams even dropped a new website all about the logo and its apparent meanings and inspirations. But it’s difficult to look at all of this planning and execution and wonder why no one involved thought the logo might look a lot like a design for the other football team in Los Angeles.
It was a pretty common reaction online: that somehow the Rams had smashed theirs and the Chargers logos together to make one new, bad logo.
The LA wordmark in particular is deeply confusing, as the league has two teams there and that broken yellow line could be a ram’s horn or maybe a minimalist lightning bolt?
There are two Los Angeles NFL teams.
One team is the LA Rams. Their colors are blue, gold, and white.
The other is the LA Chargers. Their colors are blue, gold, and white.
Whose logo is this? pic.twitter.com/mkMfHtcpqQ
— Parker Molloy (@ParkerMolloy) March 23, 2020
Others flat out said, either sarcastically or by mistake, that the logo was for the Chargers.
It was also compared to many other things that are also not rams.
A brief look at the logo website is actually pretty hilarious, especially this Fibonacci Sequence explanation for why the ram horn needed to be a spiraling circle that looks more like a lightning bolt than, say, an actual ram’s horn.
This isn’t letting “nature’s beauty unfold” here, gang, it’s letting design jargon get in the way of actually making a good logo. And don’t get me started on this townhouse ram, which for some reason looks like scuttled Coachella headpiece concept art.
It’s all very bad, except for the typeface on the three stack wordmark. That’s nice and will look good in most places. Just not a helmet or anywhere else you need, you know, a logo.
Written by: Uproxx