THINGS WE KNOW FOR SURE ABOUT OTHER FANS.
Always nice to begin a piece with a bit of self-endorsement, which is precisely what we’ll do: if you haven’t listened to the Tony Barnhart interview from EDSBS Live this past Tuesday, you should, and not just to hear us on the tail end of an epic caffeine bender.
The best line in the whole thing doesn’t come from any of the participants, but rather from the dead and great Lewis Grizzard. Barnhart mentioned the line Grizzard had on the Clemson-Georgia game:”It’s more than a football game. It’s their way of life against ours.” No one’s ever issued a statement more perfectly encapsulating why, mid-game, you may actually look at the otherwise pleasant and similar people wearing different colors than yours and suddenly feel like you gazed upon the primitive celebrations of a lesser, hairy-knuckled tribe unworthy of having clean water and healthy children–and certainly unworthy of being on the same field as your obviously superior, fully-evolved football team of gridiron samurai.
The irony in all of this is that most people accuse the opposition of being guilty of something they are, by demographic, equally or more guilty of the offense themselves. Nothing’s funnier to the outsider than watching SEC fans accuse other SEC fans of being “redneck” or trash, especially when the rest of the country walks around with this mental cheatsheet of regional prejudice in their head:

However, since we’re soooooo scientific, which individual myths about fanbases are true? We propose a few below based solely on our own observations over the years, shying away from the obvious ones (jean shorts on Florida fans, for example) and attempting to say things we know are absolutely, unequivocally true.
Auburn fans use Weber Grills. Not an insult, but something definitive and true we know we can say as a rule about Auburn fans is that they cook with the classic, steel-egg Weber grill. And they grill like there’s no tomorrow. Alabama fans may, of course, suggest that they do this out of a lack of understanding of the basics of propane and propane-related technologies–they will, of course, in addition to suggesting that Alabama fans taught Auburn fans the secret of fire only to watch them burn their own houses down.
Georgia fans wear red slacks. If you’re going to geek out, go head first, or in the case of Georgia fans, dick-first into your geekery. Often pleated, sometimes stained, and rarely unnoticeable, screaming red pants on Georgia fans is a near universal certainty at Dawg games. We have only one thing to say about this, which is that we know two kinds of people who wear red pants by choice: Zouaves, and fabulous Canadian figure skater Brian Orser.

Red pants= sexcellent!
3. Michigan fans are very smart, and very grumbly. Undoubtedly among the most intellectual and most tortured of fans, Wolverines can sound like football Kierkegaards even in the best of times, salting even their greatest successes with grumbles about Lloyd Carr’s conservatism, Mike Debord’s baffling “non-scoring” offense, and most notably other Michigan fans, who are too quiet at games, too complacent/not complacent enough re: Carr and Bo’s boys, or not angry enough about Ohio State’s recent run of ownership in college football’s most corrosive rivalry.
The vinegary Brian of the MGoBlog isn’t the exception, from our experience: he’s the rule.
Ohio State fans don’t need no instructions how to rock. Because they know what rocks: Ohio State. What doesn’t rock? Michigan, and you, if you happen to not be Ohio State. The mirror image of Michigan’s tortured Scandinavian outlook, Ohio State fans are sunshine-pumpers of the Nth degree, loyal, screaming fandogs who’ll turn the tamest social event into an opportunity to scream at you for thirty minutes about how wrong, wrong, wrong you are about Cheatypants Sweatervest and his program.
We know this from experience, as we’ve had at least two incidents involving OSU fans that went like this.
OS: You know OSU won that game on a blown pass interference call.
OSU fan: nnnnOOOAOAAAAHIIIIIGGGHHH!!!!! (Rips off shirt, grows to three times normal size, stomps around for thirty minutes.)
(Fast forward to end of conversation.)
OS: You need to calm down.
OSU fan: (shrinks to normal size, redons tatters of shirt.)EEIIIAAAHHHHhhhh….no, you’re wrong. But we should totally do that again sometime.
OS: Sure.

Ohio State fans: seriously into it.
Notre Dame fans, aside from their chaotic student section, are very, very serious. We thought it was just the age thing, what with all the geriatric monied alumni throwing heaps of money to keep their spot on the wooden benches safe. But no, after some field research we have determined that Notre Dame fans watch the game with the intensity of Enrico Fermi ripping scraps of paper up and tossing them into the wind to determine the force of the first atom bomb blast.
This means a lot of very intense sitting, something we could barely handle in any situation, much less the frenzy of a football game. The ADD kicked in around the second quarter, where we began yelling “rrrRRRROOOOOLLLLLL TAAAAAHHHHHDDE” in our thickest drawl during lulls in the game. (Being the UCLA/ND game, it was pretty much one long lull until the lid-flipping end.) It proved to be a great smartass test, as anyone who appreciated the obvious humor of a bad running gag turned laughing to see who the idiot was. These people, we thought, are our troops. The rest of the endzone section just kept craning their necks, looking for whomever was letting off the semantic flatulence in their stadium.
Point being: they’re serious folks. We half expected white boards to break out in the stands during timeouts.
Florida State fans all like Toby Keith. We’ve had this theory for a while, since in truth it’s very difficult to discern Florida fans from Florida State fans if you don’t have a copy of their SATs lying around. (We kid, we kid! Actually, we don’t. But we also had to move to Taiwan to get a job with an English degree with our Florida degree, so again, liberally salt all jabs and content.)
Like the Hutu and Tutsi, we’re actually all intermarried, intermingled, and very, very similar in many respects. Only one factor sticks out as a salient dividing line between the two camps: Toby Keith.
We’ve created a handy chart to help you with this division:

While a Florida fan may like Toby Keith (perfectly legal operation here,) a Florida State fan MUST by rule like Toby Keith. They must be a Ford truck man, that’s all he drii–haiiives, he don’t have no boundaries, he don’t compromise. The Florida State fan believes in a little less talk and a lot more action, and in his sadder moments believes he should have been a cowboy. When he scores, he may ask how do you like him at that moment, or who your daddy truly is; when you beat him senseless, he will sing about how he’s not as good as he once was, and perhaps get drunk and be somebody just to feel better.
But the rule remains: he/she MUST like Toby Keith. It’s a natural law.
Leave your own below.
193 Replies »
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50
Hey, I take offense to that, Orson and Jason. I’m a “bo.”
Comment by rob — May 8, 2007 @ 10:58 am
49
USCe also has the most nasty, vile filled blue hairs I have ever met. Have you ever seen to 60+ year old women engage in a good ole fashion donnybrook…I have, and it ain’t pretty.
Comment by Adam — May 8, 2007 @ 10:57 am
48
We would say that all male South Carolina fans could plausibly be called “Red” by their buddies.
It’s a look thing.
Comment by Orson Swindle — May 8, 2007 @ 10:56 am
47
The Alabama memorabilia one if dead on.
Another from my observations a few years ago, all USCocks fans look like Steve Tanneyhill.
i.e. - http://img251.imageshack.us/img251/328/tanneyhillyr0.jpg
Comment by Jason — May 8, 2007 @ 10:53 am
46
ahh…remove that “both.”
Comment by rob — May 8, 2007 @ 10:53 am
45
FACT: WVU fans shit in opposing band’s seats.
Comment by RaginCajunRebel — May 8, 2007 @ 10:52 am
44
Tommy Bowden Corollary to the Chan Gailey Theory: Whereas Chan will always go 7-5, Clemson & Tommy will always go 8-4. It’s a law, like Democratic Peace.
Also, Clemson fans still think it’s 1981. In both clothes, hairstyle and in football.
Comment by rob — May 8, 2007 @ 10:52 am
43
As a Penn State fan - I have to think about this - do I know anyone other than Penn State fans? I know a lot of different types of PSU fans… Is there such thing as a non-PSU fan? nah.
That’s what a Penn State fan is like.
Comment by PSUgirl — May 8, 2007 @ 10:50 am
42
Sean, that is funny, and we really are LOL.
Remember the tradeoff: drop rickets, but pick up malaria.
Comment by Orson Swindle — May 8, 2007 @ 10:50 am
41
Georgia Tech fans are nerds and will readily admit to same. Also there are no girls there.
Tennessee fans have big hair. I agree with you that “redneck” slurs directed from one SEC school to another are almost invariably pot/kettle, but if you’re talking about specific redneck characteristics, UT fans cling most loyally to the borderline pompadours (male) and bangs teased up in the air to an almost architectural degree (female) that, for the rest of the country, were pretty much completely dead around the time Bush I left the White House.
By the way, I am going out and buying a pair of red pants this week specifically BECAUSE you mentioned it in this post.
Comment by Doug the future Mr. Theuriau — May 8, 2007 @ 10:48 am
40
Louisville fans are really nice and civil. I was there for the blowout at USF a few years ago and they were very mellow and quite accepting of what was a nasty turn of events.
In contrast, USF fans are remarkably unsure of what to do when they win, even in the student section. The University is still figuring out how exactly they should act.
Comment by That 5.0 Guy — May 8, 2007 @ 10:45 am
39
Go lutefisk yourself.
Comment by drogue — May 8, 2007 @ 10:44 am
38
Well, Mist-er “I sure as heck think I’m a hoot” Swindle, you sure could do a lot worse than watching some football with people from the Upper Midwest, don’cha know.
Put down the barbecued chicken and pass me the jar of pickled herring, the box of Triscuits and a Grain Belt, there!
Comment by Sean — May 8, 2007 @ 10:39 am
37
32–or it could just be people traveling south because they needed sunlight. Rickets ain’t fun, yo.
Comment by Orson Swindle — May 8, 2007 @ 10:39 am
36
Re: Mosby
Leave it to a tech fan to get angry about being lumped in with better teams.
Comment by blackertai — May 8, 2007 @ 10:39 am
35
32- We’re still waiting on the brilliant part of the thesis.
Comment by drogue — May 8, 2007 @ 10:38 am
34
That assessment of tOSU fans is right on point. My example of this is after the Fiesta bowl two years ago I went to a bar to see my friend who is a Buckeye. I congratulate my friend on the win and we talk about the game. I say I like the way ND is recruiting now and the way the program is headed. My friend starts to yell at me about OSU recruiting, then his brother and cousin come over and start yelling at me as well. Now I have a family reunion yell at me about recruiting. So yeah they are batshit crazy.
Comment by Ry — May 8, 2007 @ 10:29 am
33
USCe fans leave after the 3rd quarter. Always.
Comment by Adam — May 8, 2007 @ 10:27 am
32
Uh, I freely admit that I’m reposting this from a different blog’s comments section. However, I am the orginal author and, as such, have no interest in redrafting my brilliant thesis:
Let’s get onboard with what I like to call my “Social Trickle-Down Theorem”: about 160 years ago the good citizens of the State of Michigan looked around and thought, “you know, we have a lot of unsavories in this here state,” so they gathered up all of the criminals, thieves, and generally bad people and drove them over the southern border of this great state; hence the populations of Indiana and Ohio.
You see, Ohio is Michigan’s Australia.
Well, some time later Indiana and Ohio looked around and thought, “Damn, we have a lot of bad people here” and - following the lead of there intellectual and thrifty Northern brethren (barely related) - they created what we now know as the population of Kentucky.
Kentucky eventually learned their own lesson and discarded their relatively unsavory individuals leaving us with Tennessee. Tennessee in about 20 years created Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia and - in time - those three states gave us…
Florida, the brine of the genetic barrel and source of the election debacle.
To further illustrate my point, every state listed above (with the exception of Michigan, of course) is responsible for the shame that our nation endured during the ‘04 election - though some began the slow journey back to righteousness in ‘06.
Comment by Gary — May 8, 2007 @ 10:27 am
31
WVU fans are not permitted to have more than 14 teeth total and must love the taste of moonshine in the morning. Research hasn’t confirmed if the two are related.
Comment by John — May 8, 2007 @ 10:27 am
30
I prefer the term “Land Grant institution” to A&M school. Plus, we Auburn fans don’t count all time records vs the Turds, we only count the past 24 years since the playing field was leveled.
Comment by Bottagetta — May 8, 2007 @ 10:26 am
29
RE #10:
I can’t decide which is more offensive, referring to Georgia Tech as an A&M school or lumping us in with Michigan State, Auburn, Oklahoma State, and Clemson.
Comment by Mosby — May 8, 2007 @ 10:23 am
28
aTm fans.
Well, then never lose halftime.
Comment by Murphy — May 8, 2007 @ 10:22 am
27
@ #10:
I’m pretty sure UNC leads NC State. But that’s merely the exception that tests the rule.
Comment by Chuck — May 8, 2007 @ 10:21 am
26
Bottagetta, that explains why Dreamland has become a tourist trap and people in Tuscaloosa who want real Bar-B-Q go to Archibald’s.
Comment by PeterPumpkinhead — May 8, 2007 @ 10:21 am