Stop Swag
November 9th, 2011 | Uncategorized White House | Posted by Blair Tomlinson
In opening my emails every morning I’m accustomed to a plethora of press releases. Today the release that caught my eye was the announcement of President Obama signing an executive order to cut federal agency travel, printing and IT costs.
However it wasn’t the “news” in the release that has me blogging. It’s the use of the word swag. Sports reporters have been using the word for months now. There is no doubt that you will hear swag used if you tune into ESPN’s SportsCenter. But I didn’t expect the White House to jump on the bandwagon.
Is it just me or does the word swag bother anyone else? And the fact that the White House used it in an official press release.
Tags: cuts, executive order, Obama, swag, White House
Comments
-
BrianJ Says:
November 9th, 2011 at 3:13 pmI think “swag” has become a pretty institutionalized term, so I’m OK with its use in the memo (particularly with the clarification). Even more, I support the decision to reduce promotional stuff. It serves to increase motivation and morale, but it is especially hard to justify to tax payers.
-
Al Says:
November 9th, 2011 at 4:46 pmBeing an Engineer I’ve seen the term used all the time since in engineering it stands for “scientific wall ass guess”.
-
Al Says:
November 9th, 2011 at 4:48 pmThat is “scientific wild ass guess” not wall.
-
Shoop Says:
November 9th, 2011 at 8:44 pmThey need to cut Congress’ budget
-
Former PO employee Says:
November 10th, 2011 at 10:03 amThe term “swag” used to refer to the “loot”, “booty”, or whatever that pirates took on their raids. Now it seems it can refer to just about anything. One of our newsanchors called it “stuff we all get”.
-
Contractor Helper Says:
November 15th, 2011 at 12:29 pmPerhaps it’s just my marketing background, but I’ve seen “swag” used during the last 8 years to mean “promotional materials”. Basically cheap branded gifts used for marketing and promotional use. At a former employer, we’d hand out all sorts of branded gifts at parties, mostly shot glasses, tshirts, bumper stickers, just to get our name out and help drive new visitors to our site. It bothers me more that the White House’s appropriate use of the word would bother a fellow blogger.

