
Boring boxer shorts got a personality when Joe Boxer turned underwear into funderwear. Like Underoos for adults, Joe Boxer made dressing fun, as smiley faces, chili peppers, dollar signs, fish, jack-o-lanterns, Christmas trees and more made an appearance on menโs boxer shorts.
Nicholas Graham, a native of Calgary, Canada, moved to San Francisco in 1984, where he paired his sense of humor with his graphic arts background to create novelty neckties for the experimental man. Building on the necktie craze, Grahamโs next venture was a boldly colored pair of plaid boxers with a detachable raccoon tail, and Joe Boxer was born. No longer were men content to wear the old ratty underpants of yesteryear when Joe Boxer was around; for the first time in their lives, they went shopping for their own underwear.
Joe Boxer was the biggest hit of the decade, and made dressing (and undressing) fun for all. Wildly printed boxers replaced tightie whities on the average Joe, and everyone from garbagemen to congressmen wore the whimsical undies underneath. Apparently the United States Secret Service didnโt find it funny when they confiscated 1,000 pairs of boxers printed with $100 bills, in violation of forgery laws. But at least there was all that free publicityโฆ
Joe Boxer lit up the night with glow-in-the-dark underwear, and got up close and personal with his 3-D underwear, sold with special Undovision glasses. Americaโs favorite loud-mouthed mom, Roseanne, wore the โshut up and go to sleepโ shirt on her eponymous television show, and suburbanite gals followed her lead. Joe Boxer Girlfriend, the womanโs line, became popular with the ladies, who could now get a little something for themselves when they picked up a few clean pairs for their boys back home.
When pop/rap star Marky Mark made it his business to show off his underwear, fans followed, and it wasnโt just Calvin Klein peeking out from above the belt. When 448]l]hip-hop style began showing off oversized baggy pants that hung down the behind, Joe Boxers were the only thing that saved oneโs modesty. Boxer shorts became a way to show off your sense of style (and humor), whether your pants hung down to your knees or were kept safely under wraps of a 3-piece grey pinstripe suit.
Licky Logo, a yellow smiley face with red tongue, became the mascot for the company when they expanded beyond comic underpants. Joe Boxer now makes childrenโs wear as well as home sheeting for all of your bedtime needs. Theyโve even made jeans with ESPโthe extra sixth pocket, to remind you to play it safe. And just in case thereโs ever an emergency, Joe Boxer has got you covered: in select cities look for the Undo-Vendo, a vending machine for, you guessed it, underwear.
From underwear to outwear, Joe Boxer will keep you in style. And if you ever got caught with your pants down, well, now it wasnโt so bad.
Discover more from The Retro Network
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
I had a few pairs, my favorite were glow in the dark banana boxers….