Weāre taking over the world with the meme lord himself, one tee at a time. As soon as we met Adam, last year, we knew that he was one of the guys who gets us. And we get himāhis hilarious creations keep us endlessly entertained. So, why not work together to bring the meme world into the real world?
We caught up with Adam in New York City to chat about our limited-edition collaboration, the thrill of making real things and why T-shirts are so important to himāand for personal style, in general.
You make memes on a daily basis, but you also make tangible products, right?
Yeah, I spend a lot of time building brands at BrandFire, my agency. At the end of that, thereās the making of physical products, putting them on shelves and seeing people touch them, pick them upāitās thrilling. Plus, I like to sculpt and Iām getting involved in a gallery show. Weāre thinking about different mediaāI might paint some of my memes to bring them to life.
You used the word thrilling. Why do you find making physical products so exciting? Is it because weāre in a world dominated by the online worldāURL over IRL?
For me, I started my creative journey making tangible products. Iām 43 nowāIām not a digital babyāand when I started being a creative, there wasnāt Photoshop and Instagram, so my roots are in physical products. Itās thrilling and exciting because youāre transforming an idea into something real and tactile.
I actually used to work as a creative director at a T-shirt shop in Long Island in the ā90s. I worked in the art department, but it was very close to where theyād do the printing, so Iād design them in my office then theyād come out a few meters away. I loved seeing the shirts come off the line; I loved the smell of it and picking them up off the press, when they were still hot. Iād get into mixing the colors. Being able to touch, and feel, and see, and smell my ideasāI got such a thrill out of seeing things come to life. It was extremely gratifyingābeing able to wear a T-shirt I designed and then seeing other people wear it. I feel the same way about these tees weāre making.
Speaking of the collaboration ā where does the design come from?
For me, I started my creative journey making tangible products. Iām 43 nowāIām not a digital babyāand when I started being a creative, there wasnāt Photoshop and Instagram, so my roots are in physical products. Itās thrilling and exciting because youāre transforming an idea into something real and tactile.
I actually used to work as a creative director at a T-shirt shop in Long Island in the ā90s. I worked in the art department, but it was very close to where theyād do the printing, so Iād design them in my office then theyād come out a few meters away. I loved seeing the shirts come off the line; I loved the smell of it and picking them up off the press, when they were still hot. Iād get into mixing the colors. Being able to touch, and feel, and see, and smell my ideasāI got such a thrill out of seeing things come to life. It was extremely gratifyingābeing able to wear a T-shirt I designed and then seeing other people wear it. I feel the same way about these tees weāre making.

What do you think the appeal of T-shirts is? Likeāwhy choose the T-shirt as medium to bring the meme world into real life?
Well, for oneāI love T-shirts and collect them. You have your favorite ones that you love, whether itās from a musician or an artist collaboration or from a brand. It becomes this perfect expression of who you are and what you like and how you feel. Itās kind of the meme-equivalent of an article of clothing: Itās not necessarily a heavy investment and becomes accessible to everybody. Anybody can make a meme or consume a meme, just like anybody can make a T-shirt or wear one.
So itās super accessible, but, at the same time, you can elevate it. You can wear a T-shirt with a blazer, or under a nice hoodie. You can dress it up, you can make it a staple of your wardrobe, you can wear it when youāre just hanging out. Itās the most versatile and accessible piece of clothing.
But I really think it comes back to expressiveness. Thatās what people are tapping into when they wear a bright tee or a graphic teeātheyāre showing people how they feel and what theyāre into. A T-shirt strikes the perfect balance between culture and art and accessibility.