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My dying wish is for an owl/camel hybrid, which I call camowl.

Summer Megaparty: I Hate Hat Day.


"Hat Day." Separately, I'm fine with those two words. Together, I hate them as much as I hate anything in this world. Here's why:

I was a loser in junior high. No other way to describe it. I had my share of friends in grade school and was pretty okay with the world at large, but my mind and body decided to enter its awkward stage on the first day of the sixth grade, and stayed that way until I got to high school. I was goofy, round-faced, inadequate, and worst of all, I wore terrible clothes. Like, knockoff Skidz pants with Syracuse Orangemen t-shirts, which I only wore because I thought the orange mascot was cool. People would ask me who my favorite player was, and I couldn't even tell them what sport the Orangemen participated in.

Junior high was the most miserable time of my life, and I could tell you a thousand hilarious stories about my tremendous social failures throughout it, but they aren't relevant to this particular story. I just wanted you to have some context before I tell you about a little old thing called "Hat Day."

In the seventh grade, our teachers informed us of the upcoming special event known as "Hat Day." On this day and this day only, students were allowed to wear hats during classes. They told us that those who wore the most creative, extravagant hats would win prizes. While I usually shied away from anything resembling the spotlight, something clicked.

So I went home, grabbed a gigantic cardboard box, taped it to a cumbersome construction hat and fashioned myself a hat version of the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City. This thing was hideous. Two feet tall, bulky, with casino highlights crudely drawn on in crayon. Fourteen rolls of scotch tape liberally plastered all over the hat. I was pretty proud of it at the time, and because I falsely considered "Hat Day" more like a skewed version of the yearly science fair, I boldly entered the courtyard...with a cardboard Trump Taj Mahal on top of my head.

And what did I see? What products of the artist's mind had my fellow students worn? 500 baseball caps. I was one of maybe a dozen students who made wacky hats, and of them, my stupid casino resort was by far the largest, corniest and most absurd. It took all of three seconds for everyone in sight distance to point and laugh, and it was only going to get worse from there.

Because I was one of very few students with a "creative" hat, and because mine was the size of a Ford Taurus, I was selected as one of the big winners. Would I win a new television, or maybe free tickets to Six Flags? I couldn't wait to find out.

Forget the televisions. My "reward" was a special "Hat Day" assembly, in which the ten kids with the best hats got to march in a circle up on stage in front of a jam-packed auditorium of laughing classmates. For like ten whole minutes, we just stood there walking in circles, trying to fight the tears as we struggled to keep our stupid, cumbersome hats from falling off. Aside from being forced to practice my nude robot dance on national television, I can think of nothing more embarrassing.

Upon returning from school, I didn't even make it into the house before kicking and ripping my Trump Taj Mahal hat into a zillion pieces. As I recall, I convinced my mother to let me stay home the next day, in the hopes that by the time I got back to school, everyone would've forgotten that they'd last seen me getting dizzy onstage with a cardboard hotel on my head. They did not.

Oh, I did get one small tangible prize aside from the glory of being a sideshow attraction at a school assembly. They made me a button.


I really, really hated "Hat Day."

Posted by Matt on 06/29/2007. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 112 comments

We never did anything like this in junior high, because I went to a “special” school for troubled and disabled kids during those years, but we did have Spirit Week in high school. Not that most people took part, including me, but thank goodness they didn’t make us parade around in them.

The worst was “Funky 70s Day” – there’s a picture in my junior yearbook of a couple of kids in their idea of disco threads. Thank goodness it’s a black-and-white shot, or the reader might go blind from the ugly neon polyester suits and low-as-you-dare blouses.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 06/29/2007 8:58 PM


I have to ask Matt,do you plan on attending your 10yr high school reunion?

Mine is this year and I am so not going. Like you I loathed most all those whom I went with,and thanks to myspace I have now seen they became pure trash while I live a good life. Karma is a bitch I tell ya.

Chestnuts roasted by shortcake 79 @ 06/29/2007 10:13 PM


You people are making me insert numbers to all my posts now to address all the key issues.
(1) Similar to Matt and Commander Awesome’s tales of middle school woe: 7th grade, Halloween. I knew it would be uncool to wear a “real” costume. HOWEVER, I wanted to be wacky and would miscalculate a joke that no one would find the least bit funny. *SIGH* I wore a bath robe, a Miami Hurricanes tank top, and flip-flop slipper things (??). Basically, I was using Halloween to wear sleep clothes to school. And to top it all off (MY GOD, I MUST REALLY LOVE/TRUST YOU PEOPLE), I wore a cheap plastic arrow through the head thing.
I wasn’t sent home but, needless to say, I did not get the reaction I thought I would get. Where were my parents??
(2) I dress up for SPIRIT WEEK’s at school now a la MUPPET BABY’s post. There’s a picture of me somewhere on a SNT dressed up in my regalia. (Kneg??)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 06/29/2007 10:27 PM


Hat day — I usually wore a ball cap. My embarrassment came on Halloween – 7th grade — when I dressed up as an old lady. Complete with old lady dress, fake boobs, makeup, the works…While I did get 2nd prize, I also got made fun of. A lot.

Chestnuts roasted by jbolo @ 06/29/2007 10:28 PM


Forgive the double post but I agree with shortcake79′s assertion that MySpace has killed the notion of a high school reunion. One of the reasons I am not going to my 10 year this year is MySpace has already pulled back the veil on the ravages of aging. :shock:

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 06/29/2007 10:31 PM


If it makes you feel any better I had a similar situation at school during halloween. We were told we could wear a costume and seeing as it was the early 90′s I had a brilliant idea (at the time).
I had a couple of Roddy Piper “Hot-Rod!” shirts (from my name you can probably guess I’m a Piper and Transformer mark), so I went around town and found a kilt…Yeah..a kilt…
So here I am, walking into class wearing a Roddy Piper costume. The worst part was my first class was JROTC where I was the 1st Sgt. and responsible for standing in the front of the class and taking roll. Not fun…Not fun…

Chestnuts roasted by RowdyRodimusPrime @ 06/29/2007 10:31 PM


Manimal and Muppet Baby:

I do the same thing now with my class. In fact,I am always the silliest looking one of all. I wonder if I am trying to make up for old times,and now no one can say I’m strange for doing it. Maybe being a grown up isn’t so bad after all. LOL!!!

Chestnuts roasted by shortcake 79 @ 06/29/2007 10:32 PM


For my many years of Hat days i wound up with a santa hat, beat that!

Chestnuts roasted by Fox @ 06/29/2007 10:38 PM


I truly haven’t laughed as hard as I did when reading this article in quite some time. My throat actually hurts a little bit right now. That was a classic story. Hilarious.

Since I have laughed at one of your most embarrasing moments I suppose it is only fair that I share one of my own as well. In scouring the ol’ memory banks for a sixth grade tale I did come up with something…

I was lucky enough to live only a few blocks from the elementary school I attended in sixth grade. This of course meant that I wasn’t subjected to a bus ride to-and-from school everyday. Most of the time I just walked, but on other days, special days, I would ride my bike and lock it up in the school’s bike rack. I remember it was a brisk October afternoon. The dismissal bell had just rang and I was out the door and on my bike for the short trek back home. Hey, if I was lucky I would have an issue of Nintendo Power waiting for me!

Well, as it happened, luck was not with me that particular day.

Not a block from the school I proceeded to wipe out on my bike and completely flip over the handlebars, landing in the grass between the sidewalk and street. The yard I was cutting through just happened to belong to one of those freaks who kept everything just so – the perfect yard. This of course meant that somehow they had created a groove of around one inch or two between the cement sidewalk and the grass of their yard. I suppose to keep everything clean looking and the grass perfectly trimmed. My front tire found that groove, when I was least expecting it, and my front wheel locked into it, propelling me straight forward, landing face and chest first into the ground.

As soon as I realized that I wasn’t hurt seriously my mind quickly switched to damage-control mode. I knew I was still well within viewing distance of the school and there could be dozens of kids either staring at me at that very moment, and if not, there would be very soon. I needed to get up and get up quickly. My entire reputation, what little of it there was, was at stake.

It was at that very moment that I heard the roar of a diesel engine very nearby.

I turn to my left to see a school bus, loaded with glaring, wide-eyed faces pass by on the street not ten feet from the scene of the crime. Half of the faces looked concerned while the other half were howling with laughter.

To make matters worse I was a new student at this school. I had been there maybe a month. It was certainly not the first impression I wanted to make.

So yeah, that sucked. I feel ya Matt. Screw sixth grade.

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toe @ 06/29/2007 10:49 PM


This blog entry has been the best part of my day. Thank you Matt.

Chestnuts roasted by kilgore2345 @ 06/29/2007 11:12 PM


Sorry about the downtime, folks. We’re back up!

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 06/30/2007 1:07 AM


Wow, that sucks. Reminds me of the clown play I had to endure during fifth grade, except worse because I was at least with 80 other clowns.

………….Except I was the only pissed off clown. Everyone else was happy, I was angry. I fuggin hate clowns.

Chestnuts roasted by Ben @ 06/30/2007 1:08 AM


I too have a horrible Hat-day story.

I had a little red-headed step child tormentor in elementary school. His name was Ralph (isn’t it ALWAYS Ralph?)

Anyway, Ralph was a very aggressive tormentor. I don’t say Bully, because he didn’t have the guts to like beat people up or anything. He’d make comments, start rumors, insult, but never do things physically.

One day, in 5th grade I think, Hat Day rolls around. It was stupid, because I disliked hats and didn’t even own one. I asked for one. At the time, the Chicago Bulls were in the middle of their championship streak, so my mother, not knowing, got a hat.

I go in, and yes, Ralph had the same hat. I was content to take it off and just ignore the silliness.

Not Ralph. From that day forth, I was “Copy Cat Fat”.

Copy Cat Fat. Wow, at 5th grade he was a winner, non?

Eventually, a year or two later, and about 30 lbs bigger due to weight training for wrestling, I flipped a lunch table to get at him. He backed off then. He still was calling me Copy Cat Fat, though.

Oh, things come back that you do though. Fast Forward 15 years. My father starts a new management position – and guess who works for him? Yep, Ralph. He’s an incompetent who would forget his tools, break other people’s and generally have no concept how to do his job (repair of large machinery).

So my father, at his first performance review, said he was not going to be renewed. On his way out, “By the way, Ralph, do you remember a large young boy you use to make fun of in elementary school? Copy Cat Fat’s father says your fired.”

Last I knew, he was serving a 3-5 for Domestic Abuse in an upstate NY Prison (and no, that’s not a joke, but it shows what being a little jerk in elementary school leads to.)

Chestnuts roasted by Saint Stryfe @ 06/30/2007 1:13 AM


Our version of Hat Day in middle school was Yankee Day, which we celebrated every time the Yankees won the World Series. It was the only day we were allowed to wear hats, but only if they were Yankees caps.
One year, when the Yankees had beaten the Atlanta Braves, the school also hung a huge piece of paper in the main hallway for a few days and we were all allowed to write pro-Yankee statements on it. The school would then send the paper to the team, because I’m sure they wanted nothing more than a large piece of cheap brown paper with middle school student scrawlings all over it. A friend and I rebelled and wrote (in pencil and in microscopic letters in one corner) “Go Braves!”
Crazy like a fox.

Chestnuts roasted by Dylan @ 06/30/2007 1:36 AM


We had pajama day which was also D.E.A.R. Day (for those who don’t know, that’s Drop Everything And Read Day). It was awesome because you could wear your pajamas to school and bring your sleeping bag and pillows and stuffed animals and just read all freaking day. My favorite day of the whole school year… except for the Halloween Radio Show. Did anyone else’s school do a radio show instead of an assembly on a certain day of the week?

Chestnuts roasted by Special K @ 06/30/2007 1:42 AM


Oh, and for the record, I CANNOT believe no one has referred to the headgear in question as The Taj Ma-hat.

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toe @ 06/30/2007 1:57 AM


I enjoyed your story, Matt I hope that didn’t kill your creative outgoing spirit. Sometimes it’s fun to bring attention to yourself, even with the risk of being made fun of.

Growing up the friends I made either betrayed me or moved. I had a group of friends though the middle or end of 6th grade until the middle of 10th grade. That was great even though I was still made fun of by the popular kids and still kept to myself most of the time. My friends were like me, shy and nerdy in some unique way, and were very nice. They moved eventually and I lost track of most of them except I found one about a year ago, she’s totally different it’s like getting to know a different person all together.

Anyway our spirit weeks usually were leading up to homecoming in high school, spirit day which were school colors (white green and black) pajama day, Hat day probably (which was cool in middle school because we couldn’t usually wear them) clash day (i remember blue plaid pants with little sunflowers on them which rarely matched anything anyway so that was easy) 50′s day, 60′s day, 70′s day, 80′s day we even had a 70′s day dance, this person wore awesome red coke a cola retropants and an afro, a girl, I wore hippie clothes, i had long hair at the time so I just wore a tie dye shirt and this girl snobbily said “this is the 70s not the 60′s” whateva to her. But usually I didn’t participate in school activities becuase i knew it just set me up to be made fun of.

Even though the last halloween I dressed up was my freshman year of high school and I dressed up in a weird al costume, the pothead slacker types made fun of me oh yes they did, so no more dressing up for me.

I vomited this last wednesday on a school bus full of adults (gaterade on a hot day, remember that kids that doesn’t mix even though it sounds good at the time) and I was suprisingly not embarrassed I enjoyed being the center of attention. I get that way sometimes.

That’s why I relate to the show freaks and geeks so much which I have been watching on Joox.net lately. I watched it when I was in high school too but I appreciate it in a new light lately. Joox.net f.ckin rules.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 06/30/2007 2:01 AM


Are you asking me if I dress up for spirit day, Manimal? Or if I can find the post with the link to your pic in the blog archives?

The answers are no (I don’t have a permanent school as I’m still a substitute) and maybe if you really want me to, respectively. I’m sorry, I haven’t read this thread very carefully, I’m recovering from an allnighter.

Soooo, I bought TF: The movie on DVD, FINALLY. Every bit as mind-blowing as I remember and somehow even better. I also got Movie Jazz!! Not as cool design-wise as Optimus but c’mon Hong Kong Phooey, people!!! It’s all about nostalgia. When I went to buy Optimus, I went with my mom and it was like being 6 years old again. You can’t put a price on that.

Chestnuts roasted by K- @ 06/30/2007 2:24 AM


Awww that’s just so sad! We had stupid days like that in middle school too. I remember 50′s day, pajama day, silly hair day, etc., etc. For pajama day I once wore Ninja Turtle pajamas. I was already considered to be in the “Nerd Herd” that’s what the other kids called me and my friends, so this sealed the deal completely. I guess an 11 year old girl in Ninja Turtle pjs is weird or something. Anyway the nerd herd rocks!

Chestnuts roasted by Donata05 @ 06/30/2007 2:29 AM


Two things on topic:

1. Puking in school- I can relate. First grade was worse, but eighth grade as pretty bad because it was twice in one day. No need to describe it.

2. How did I miss this one? Senior year, this one kid wrote up a two-page proposal for why we should wear hats in school. One-sided, single spaced, taped to the walls all over the school. It was riddled with spelling and grammar mistakes, and I think he managed to offend everybody. I took home a copy so I could laugh at it for the rest of my life. Hats in school- they’re trouble, I tell ya.

Chestnuts roasted by Rainbowfeet @ 06/30/2007 2:29 AM


Saw Ratatouille today. I have but 3 words for this movie: VERY…VERY…GREAT. Easily the best new movie I’ve seen this year. Everything about it just seemed…perfect. I was laughing several times (even with all the little kids in the theater), and I was really in awe of the great animation (the physical comedy of Linguini is easily some of the best sequences I’ve seen in animation in quite some time).

The voice cast was just awesome. Patton Oswalt was the perfect choice for Remy (according to wikipedia, Brad Bird got the idea to cast him because of his act about “Black Angus” ads, a personal favorite bit of mine), along with Brad Garret (Gusteau, the great Chef in the movie), Janeane Garafalo (Collette, the only woman chef in the restaurant. I forgot it was her doing that voice!), Peter O’Toole just brought out the mean snobbery of Anton Ego the food critic. Not to mention the pixar regular John Ratzenberger in a role that I found it hard to find his voice (he plays Mustafa, the head waiter)

The short cartoon that plays before it, “Lifted” (about Alien Abduction) was just a great vision of things to come, with excellent designs of the spaceship, as well as the aliens and the animation that goes along with them. And there’s no dialogue at all in this one.

The Incredibles was my favorite pixar movie…but after watching this movie, I’m reconsidering it. Yes, trust the cartoon geek literally having a nerdgasm that will be complimented by Transformers & the Simpsons Movie later in July.

As on topic: I was never a fan of “spirit week” either and the themes changed every year, save for the constant “Green & White Day”, dressing in our school colors. Spirit Week followed to college, but fortunately, like high school, only a handful of people are actually into it and participate.

I, too remember DEAR day. That was back in the day that I had a ton of good books that I was into reading.

Did anyone else’s school do a radio show instead of an assembly on a certain day of the week?

I’d kill for something like that back then, and even now. 2 of the other colleges I applied for had a radio station, and one had a tv station to boot. :(

Oh, and I seem to look like Jason Bateman, not Justin, who doesn’t exist. Now I know that guy was drunk.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 06/30/2007 2:52 AM


You don’t have to do that. I was just giving you your due as our resident archivist. :)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 06/30/2007 2:53 AM


For those wondering: the kitty -Winston, btw, after my gradnfather who built the house I live in now- is home and doing well…he’s found a place to sleep -a kitchen chair- and was great when people came over earlier about not running or freaking out -well, to much anyway ;) . Now if he can be sure to find his box and food again, all will be well with the world….

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 06/30/2007 2:58 AM


Reading these reminded me of my high school’s dress code. It basically said “you cannot do anything that is popular in today’s black youth culture” but one of the aspects was “no hats whatsoever.” (Others included no “grills”, no shirts with “gangster rappers,” (one kid wore a pair of pants covered with Tupac, Biggie, etc) and no sunglasses-in-hair because those are all gang symbols. That last one just doesn’t seem very gangster…) Sadly, this hat ban included Pep Rally days. For me, Pep Rallies on Fridays were the only days where you could come to school dressed like a commando, a riot cop (on hippie day, no less), a stereotyped nerd (which was removed because my school’s one stereotypical nerd was offended. Funny thing about it was that he won homecoming king. He didn’t realize it was a joke.), a Halloween costume (Matt, you’re the only one with access to who I dressed up as since you’re the only one who can read my e-mail addy from here), or a celebrity. Celebrity day got me going: I needed a celebrity that nobody else would think of and I had just the one – Charlie Chaplin. Of course, when it came to gathering the components of the costume, I was stuck since we weren’t allowed to wear hats and we weren’t allowed to have mustaches, or at least not Charlie Chaplin/Hitler mustaches. So I just didn’t dress up. Man, and I really wanted to get that hat…

Too many parentheses, I know, I know.

Chestnuts roasted by Ben @ 06/30/2007 3:00 AM


I used to have Donald Duck hat which had his face on the cap, and his bill for the cap’s bill. I wore that on hat day for a couple years around 1st and 2nd grades.

Chestnuts roasted by Paul @ 06/30/2007 3:02 AM


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