The success of a slogan is often measured by its recognition and the amount of public discussion it generates. Methinks perhaps that LG may have hit a home run with this one judging by just the amount of space dedicated to it here. I'd bet some PR person somewhere is snickering up his sleeve.
Oh no, most certainly not . The slogan is making people smile as they pass by a t@b (it makes us smile too each time we see it even after all this time), and THAT is truly wonderful.
2014 T@B S-Maxx with 2014 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport Turbo, Atlanta, GA.
Once again, this is all personal preference (whether to agree or disagree) and something that our forum sponsor Little Guy feels is catchy, a form of advertising and obviously (as shown above) creates conversation and is food for thought. I've owned a Little Guy for 5 years now and will say that 99.9% of the comments about the phrase were positive and most people feel it is cute..... So in as much as each of us have varying opinions about it (as we do likes & dislikes, etc.), we do have to agree to disagree, whatever your opinion is therein.... Just saying
Mike - Elmira, Mi / 2019 T@B 400 / 2021 Chevy Silverado LTZ
Funny how different we Tabbers can be! One of the first things we did when we got the T@B home was to peel off the "I go where I'm towed to" letters. My wife and I didn't care for the slogan. Hit our "hokie" button but to each their own.
"Not all those who wander are lost"-J. R. R.Tolkien 2014 T@B-S
Not an English major, just a marketing/branding/design guy. Know slogans but couldn't point out a preposition if my life depended on it. AND, don't care that I can't. That's what writers are hired for :-)
English is difficult. If it were easy, everyone would get it right. I retired my red pencil 40 years ago and have never regretted it. I still think "I Go Where I'm Towed To" is an awesome slogan, even if grammatically incorrect.
AND, I consider myself to be a "normal people." Now, there's a sentence you can pick apart with a red pencil.
Wow, this thread goes way back! No variations on what happens when letters naturally peel off. More a grammar thread.... naw, I ain't inta dat grammah stuffs. Newp. I wanna play "what happens when letters come off in strange orders and what do they spell?" Cryptic messages in the logo!!!
2017 820R Retro Toy Hauler from 2015 Tabitha T@B from 2009 Reverse LG Teardrop (but a T@Bluver at heart)
Yep, an old, old thread. Except for new features added each year, I don't know that any T@B topic hasn't been discussed and rehashed at least 2-3 times :-) That's one reason I've been pushing the search first meme.
I have two issues with this slogan: 1. Sentences DON'T end in prepositions. 2. Regardless of the poor sentence structure, when spoken out loud is has the sound of the stereotypical early 1980's kid in a television commercial. The kid who always sounds like he/she has a stuffed up nose. So when I read it, i hear, "I go where I'm told to" spoken by some obnoxious 9 year old with a bowl-cut like the kid off "Eight is Enough." Makes me ill. Seriously nauseated.
Either way, if I found it on a T@b that I paid for, I would remove it. Good riddance.
I neither love nor despise the phrase, but a few points of consideration:
1. Marketers are interested in a hook, but grammar. It was an effective hook.
2. Taglines are phrases, not necessarily sentences. Was there a period at the end? I can't remember.
3. Grammar experts disagree about the proper use of a preposition at the end of a sentence, but almost all agree that there are appropriate uses, especially when used in a manner to replicate human speech.
Like any niche, most of us were taught not to put preposition at the end of a sentence because it was easier than teaching us when it might be appropriate to do so. This is completely understandable, given the amount of spelling exceptions and other grammar rules we need to last. However, just as the "rule of thirds" can be broken in visual art of "parallel fifths" can be broken in music, the preposition rule also has reasonable exceptions.
Language and grammar are constantly evolving and for the most part I am OK with that, but I still prefer my Oxford comma.
2021 T@b 320 Boondock "Mattie Ross" | 2021 T@b Nights: 239 | Total nights in a T@b 455 | 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Overland | T@b owner since 2014
HAHA! I love it! Poor grammar and all. Ours is wearing off one letter at a time:) So far just the I at the front and the 0 at the end. I'd like to find replacement.
Comments
Larry & Booger - 2013 T@B, 2012 GMC Sierra
Happy Trails Y'all
2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!
A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya
Think it's run it's course and is time to close it out.
2014 T@B-S
2014 T@B-S
AND, I consider myself to be a "normal people." Now, there's a sentence you can pick apart with a red pencil.
Larry & Booger - 2013 T@B, 2012 GMC Sierra
Happy Trails Y'all
http://tab-rv.vanillaforums.com/discussion/comment/63820#Comment_63820
TV: 2006 Chevy Avalanche LT Z71 aka: WhiteWolf, or 1972 Chevy Custom10 P/U aka: SnarlingWolf
Spokane, Wa.
Eric aka: Lone Wolf
Except for new features added each year, I don't know that any T@B topic hasn't been discussed and rehashed at least 2-3 times :-)
That's one reason I've been pushing the search first meme.
2007 T@B
Rockford, IL
1. Sentences DON'T end in prepositions.
2. Regardless of the poor sentence structure, when spoken out loud is has the sound of the stereotypical early 1980's kid in a television commercial. The kid who always sounds like he/she has a stuffed up nose. So when I read it, i hear, "I go where I'm told to" spoken by some obnoxious 9 year old with a bowl-cut like the kid off "Eight is Enough." Makes me ill. Seriously nauseated.
Either way, if I found it on a T@b that I paid for, I would remove it. Good riddance.
1. Marketers are interested in a hook, but grammar. It was an effective hook.
2. Taglines are phrases, not necessarily sentences. Was there a period at the end? I can't remember.
3. Grammar experts disagree about the proper use of a preposition at the end of a sentence, but almost all agree that there are appropriate uses, especially when used in a manner to replicate human speech.
Like any niche, most of us were taught not to put preposition at the end of a sentence because it was easier than teaching us when it might be appropriate to do so. This is completely understandable, given the amount of spelling exceptions and other grammar rules we need to last. However, just as the "rule of thirds" can be broken in visual art of "parallel fifths" can be broken in music, the preposition rule also has reasonable exceptions.
Language and grammar are constantly evolving and for the most part I am OK with that, but I still prefer my Oxford comma.
2021 T@b 320 Boondock "Mattie Ross" | 2021 T@b Nights: 239 | Total nights in a T@b 455 | 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Overland | T@b owner since 2014