99% Invisible - Artistic License Redux

Episode Date: February 10, 2026

Idaho was the first state to slap a slogan on a license plate, “Idaho Potatoes,” which may not seem like a big deal, but it turns out this idea would end up having outsized consequences, and not j...ust for Idaho. Because what started in one state would soon spread. And when it did, the question of what should go on a license plate, and what shouldn't, would prove surprisingly contentious. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.  Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars. In 1928, a strange phenomenon was sweeping the state of Idaho, a vanishing act of sorts. A Boise resident would wake up on a typical Monday morning, drag themselves out of bed, get dressed for the day, and they would hop in their car to drive to work, not noticing that something was missing. And suddenly, cops in the rear view. And the next thing that the driver of the car knew, they were getting picked up because they weren't displaying a... license plate. Idaho historian Rick Just says license plates, well, they were disappearing. The Secretary of State was fielding complaints about all the lost tags. And soon enough, the culprit became clear. Tourists would come to Idaho and steal the plates.
Starting point is 00:00:48 Idaho's license plates were being snatched up like plush hotel bathrobes. Yeah, yeah. People would come up, but they would pull up to either a tourist park or a motel or something, and they would spot those plates and think, you know, I'd like to have a souvenir. and so they would just take it off of the car and take it home. And there was a reason why people couldn't resist swiping Idaho plates in particular. That year, the state had revolutionized license plate design. That's reporter Daniel Ackerman. Before this, plates were basic, with info like the state name and the registration numbers.
Starting point is 00:01:25 All of this on a pretty simple, solid colored background. But in 1928, the Secretary of State in Idaho, had an epiphany. He was like, we have this half square foot of open real estate just rolling around on everyone's cars. Let's do something with it. The 1928 plate is often said to be the very first advertising license plate in the country. They're the very first one that tried to advertise a product. And the product that Idaho chose will surprise absolutely no one. The state's 1928 license plates all featured a single giant potato. A big kind of elongated, goofy-looking potato. The state of but big. It was almost as big as the plate.
Starting point is 00:02:05 The registration numbers were stamped in green lettering right on top of this lumpy brown spud. I would say it looks almost fecal in nature. It does. The shape, particularly, yes, yes. The execution wasn't perfect, but it was innovative. Below the tremendous tater, there was even a modest, pragmatic slogan. Idaho potatoes. Today, every state's got a marketing slogan. Hawaii is the Aloha State, Missouri is the Show Me State.
Starting point is 00:02:36 But Idaho was the first to put theirs on a license plate. They wanted to make sure that when people thought about Idaho, they thought potatoes. And for better or worse, the association stuck. And now it's gotten to be such a thing. I mean, coming up here in a few days at New Year's Eve, we drop a potato. What do you mean? Well, you know how the Times Square. comes floating down like that.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Well, we have a big potato that comes floating down. They've been doing it about 10 years now. The concept of slapping a tagline onto a license plate might not seem like a big deal, but it turns out this idea would end up having outsized consequences and not just for Idaho. We're talking legislative clashes, multiple Supreme Court cases, and even jail time.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Because what started in one state would soon spread, and when it did, the question of what should, go on a license plate and what shouldn't would prove surprisingly contentious. The first state-issued license plates appeared at the very beginning of the 20th century, and they served a mostly bureaucratic function. More people were buying and crashing cars every year, so state governments originally mandated plates as a way to keep track of all the nuts behind the wheel. No one was interested in sloganeering.
Starting point is 00:03:55 But then Americans discovered the road trip. Well, the big factor with increase in automobiles was that it allowed people freedom to roam. You could go wherever you wanted. Christine Byron is a former history librarian at the Grand Rapids Public Library. She focuses on the history of tourism, and she says that the rise of the road trip in the 1920s created this huge new tourist market. Drivers needed services like gas stations and roadside motels that had to be. existed in the age of steam-powered travel.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Travel in east, travel in west. When you traveled by steamship or railroad, you pretty much brought what you needed with you, and your meals were served at a resort. But once the automobile came along, there was a lot more money that needed to be spent. From the state's perspective, all those new tourist dollars were up for grabs.
Starting point is 00:04:55 So states started letting the world know what they had to offer. Arizona had the Grand Canyon, Minnesota, its lakes. New Mexico, its average 310 days of sunshine per year. And in this war for tourists, states promoted themselves anywhere they could. National magazines, various automobile guides, the blue guide, the green book, and of course, tons and tons of promotional brochures. But no one thought to advertise on a license plate until 1928 when Idahoans realized that their plan. plates were too valuable to waste on just a registration number. And Rick Just says once Idaho staked its starchy flag on the license plate, the rush was on. License plates became a different thing because of that potato.
Starting point is 00:05:43 States spent the middle of the century transforming their plates from austere government documents into colorful boosters of tourism and industry. You could even think of them as miniature little ads that are driving, you know, all over the state and all over the country, hopefully. In 1940, Arizona stamped Grand Canyon State on its plates and never looked back. In 1950, Minnesota went with land of 10,000 lakes. Meanwhile, New Mexico actually put Sunshine State on its plates in 1932, before Florida muscled in the slogan in 1949.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Florida, for the record, only has an average of 237 days of sunshine for year, but whatever. Wisconsin was America's dairy land. Maine was vacation land. Other states couldn't make up their minds. Michigan's plate, for example, initially sported the phrase water wonderland in 1954. Which then evolved into winter water wonderland. Followed by Great Lakes State, Great Lakes, and Great Lakes Splendor. In 1970, Michigan's state tourism council actually adopted the slogan, the Michigan's, the almost islands of the Great Lakes.
Starting point is 00:06:52 But sadly, that plate never happened. Today, license plates like these are a national institution, and it's fun in a kitsy Americana kind of way. Each state is earnestly trying to put its best foot forward. So what could possibly be wrong here? It turns out quite a bit. Because as fun as some of these plates might have been, at half a square foot, a license plate is a small canvas. And when you have to pick one symbol to represent an entire state, you are not going to please everyone. And this has caused trouble from the get-go.
Starting point is 00:07:27 In 1928, when Idaho unleashed the potato plates, it didn't go over all that well. People detested those license plates. Lots of Idahoans, it turned out, resented being associated with the state's cash crop. Particularly people from northern Idaho, because they don't grow potatoes up there. Really, it's a kind of a southeastern Idaho thing. Newspaper editorials called it an embarrassment. One headline actually read, Why bring that up?
Starting point is 00:07:56 And probably it's a good thing that they just dropped the idea entirely and went back to numbers in 1929. No motto, no graphics, and certainly no potatoes. And license plate quarrels weren't unique to Idaho. Florida had to dump one of its plate designs after residents complained that the grapefruit with a stem attached looked more like a bomb. Massachusetts, meanwhile, tried to put a codfish right next to its state's name, only to be blamed by fishermen for a poor catch that year because the fish on the plate was swimming away from the word Massachusetts. These dustups over license plate design can seem like, well, small potatoes.
Starting point is 00:08:36 But the fight over licensed plates was about to be taken to the next level, thanks to a politician named Meljum Thompson. In this critical battle for the survival of America, we shall not tolerate a no-win settlement. Thompson was a titan of New Hampshire politics in the 1970s. He served three terms as governor, and he was a conservative firebrand who hated Democrats. We must drive from the seats of power in the White House, Congress, and the State Department, all of the foul brood of commie lovers. Thompson had a lot of unorthodox ideas, including wanting to arm the New Hampshire National Guard with nuclear weapons.
Starting point is 00:09:20 And he was obsessed with freedom. Here's Thompson's dorky campaign song. Live for your die, don't let the freedom pass you by, stand up proud and strong, and lead this country on. Live for your die, of course, is New Hampshire's fiery state motto. It was coined by a revolutionary war vet. And Thompson loved it so much that before he became governor, he worked with allies in the state legislature to get it slapped on every car in the state. And I don't know of any more prominent place to carry a message. then write on the license plate.
Starting point is 00:10:00 That's the best billboard of all. In 1971, the slogan on the state's license plate changed from scenic New Hampshire to live free or die. But not everyone embraced the state's message. That's ridiculous. At 88 years old, George Maynard still gets heated about the New Hampshire license plate. And for good reason, it changed the. course of his life. George grew up in Rhode Island. He married a woman, Maxine, who he'd actually met in junior high. They settled into a pretty typical family life. They had kids. George got a job
Starting point is 00:10:42 as a newspaper printer. And then something happened, like really abruptly. In 1956, four years after I got married, the witnesses came to my house. They told me that God had a name and his name was Jehovah. George and his family joined the Jehovah's Witnesses. And by 1972, they had moved to Claremont, New Hampshire. That's where the trouble started. Every day, George would hop in his car and drive to work at the local printing press, with his New Hampshire license plates screaming, in all caps, live, free or die. And this really graded on George, because he didn't share Meldron Thompson's belief of freedom over everything.
Starting point is 00:11:23 As a Jehovah's Witness, George actually believed that God-given life was more important than freedom. Oh, that's right. Definitely. And the real existence of life is very precious. Life is a gift. And we appreciate it very much. George didn't want the government telling him what to die for. So then one day I decided, you know, if it's offensive, why should be forced to support something that's offensive? So I carved it up with writ tape. And when he erased the state motto, George marched to the front lines of the license plate wars. covering up the slogan was a violation of state law,
Starting point is 00:12:02 but a few weeks went by and not much happened. Until one day, George and Maxine were shopping. They left the store, they got to their car in the parking lot, and they saw a police officer writing them a ticket. George told me he'd been expecting this for a while. He didn't actually feel scared or surprised. Well, I was happy. You were happy?
Starting point is 00:12:20 Yeah, because I was expressing my belief, my rejection of something. George refused to pay the $25 ticket, and of course, I kept the tape on, I did it again. The tickets piled up until his consistent refusal to pay landed him in court. And the judge put him away for 15 days. And so if you don't want to live free or die, you'll go to jail in New Hampshire. Two weeks may not seem like hard time, but the sentence had a huge impact on George's life.
Starting point is 00:12:50 When he didn't show up for work, he got fired. And he was embarrassed that his kids had to see him hauled away. Things were tough for the Maynards. But George still wasn't done fighting. With the help of the American Civil Liberties Union, he filed suit in New Hampshire, claiming the state's law prohibiting the altering of license plates was unconstitutional. And the state court agreed. But Meldrim, Live Free or Die, Thompson, had become governor by then.
Starting point is 00:13:14 And Thompson was not inclined to extend George the freedom to cover up his beloved motto. So Thompson appealed the case. We'll hear arguments next in... All the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. 751453, bully against Maynard. The license plates collided with the First Amendment before the High Court in November of 1976.
Starting point is 00:13:40 During oral arguments, George Maynard's lawyer claimed that in covering up, live-free or die, George was just exercising his freedom of expression. License plates are displayed on people's private vehicles. He argued the government can't just hijack that space and force people to express a certain viewpoint. And it's our position that the state lacks the power to require its citizens to bear this sort of motto.
Starting point is 00:14:04 I think that if the court were to uphold this sort of thing, then the state could require all citizens to wear a pin or an armband. Or they could require you to have a plaque on your door next to your address saying live free or die. New Hampshire countered with, what's the big deal? Just because it's on the license plate doesn't mean every driver believes in it. And sometimes it seemed like the court was buying it, like Justice Thurgood. The first time I noticed Martel was after this case was filed. I had never paid any attention to it.
Starting point is 00:14:34 I noticed New Hampshire license. I said, well, it's about New Hampshire. But I didn't live or die about it. Well, most people in New Hampshire don't either. They accept it. So what was it? Was a license plate a declaration of the state's ideology or just a thing that says nothing at all
Starting point is 00:14:50 since everybody had one? George couldn't make it to D.C. for the ruling. He actually found out the same way as everyone else. From CBS News headquarters in New York, this is the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite. The Supreme Court ruled today that drivers may not be compelled to... Cronkite came on the news and says that the Supreme Court rule is our favor
Starting point is 00:15:15 that you can tape over the state bottles, and so that was nice. The court, in effect, gave them permission to tape over the offensive words. the court got it right in the Maynard case. Caroline Mala Corbin is a First Amendment scholar at the University of Miami. She says the court's 6-3 decision hinged on a concept called compelled speech. The First Amendment protects both your right to speak, so it protects you against government censorship. But the free speech clause also protects your right not to speak. So it protects you against the government forcing you to say an ideological
Starting point is 00:15:56 message that you disagree with. And that was what the problem was here. They were trying to force you to say something that you don't want to say and you don't want to live by. In George's homemade solution, that strip of red tape, it actually held up under the weight of the First Amendment. And so that's my way of expressing my free speech. At this point, it might seem like George Maynard's case solved the license plate problem.
Starting point is 00:16:25 Today, if you live in, say, New Jersey and object to the notion that you live in the garden state, well, you can cover that sucker up. Your car is not a government billboard on wheels. But it turns out the constitutional battle over license plates is not over, because after all that was settled, a new problem showed up. Specialty plates. You've seen these. Unlike vanity plates where drivers choose their own numbers and letters, specialty plates sport alternate designs with their own logos and slogans. They're usually put out in collaboration with the government by a non-governmental organization. When drivers choose a specialty plate, they pay a little extra, and those proceeds get split between their chosen group and the State Department of Motor Vehicles.
Starting point is 00:17:08 So, for example, in my family, we have a Save the Manatees license plate. That's a specialty license plate that the state of Florida offers that we paid extra money to purchase. Why did you choose the Manatee plate? What are ridiculous questions we want to save a manatee naturally. Specialty plates are easy money. A lot of states will issue one to almost any nonprofit, as long as enough people are interested. But the problem with an open-door policy is you might not like who comes inside.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And a decade ago, the state of Texas learned that the hard way. I'm now calling the meeting for November 10, 2011, at the board of the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles to Order. Usually public hearings for the DMV are dull, bureaucracuse. Democratic affairs, poorly attended. But in 2011, the board of the Texas DMV held a standing room-only hearing. So we're going to move to agenda item 5A, which is the approval of specialty license plate. The DMV board votes on proposed designs for specialty plates. They generally approve the designs with very little fanfare or scrutiny. But this one was different.
Starting point is 00:18:18 The sons of Confederate veterans wanted Texas to issue a license plate featuring the Confederate Battleflag, and a lot of people weren't happy about it. Dozens of community leaders showed up to testify. Good morning. Thank you very much for letting me come. That voice you're hearing is Sanfronia Thompson. She's a Texas State House representative and a black woman born in 1939.
Starting point is 00:18:42 There was a time that I could not even come on the grounds of the capital because I was black. And it's very difficult to be able to see these symbols because they bring back memories. And to me, it's like sticking poop in the face of black people every day to see them. That's how repulsive it is. We have folks who say, well, I'm offended by the SCV plate. And my response is, and your point?
Starting point is 00:19:12 In favor of the Confederate flag plates was Jerry Patterson. He's the commissioner of the Texas Land Office and a member of the sons of Confederate veterans. Nolan has a right to go. through life to be unoffended. Patterson made a First Amendment argument. He thought that if enough people like him wanted a specialty plate related to Texas history, then the state shouldn't be allowed to prevent him from having it.
Starting point is 00:19:34 There's also some folks who suggested, well, now, if you want to do that, have it a Mexican flag plate. And I say, bring it on. And if that plate offended anyone? My response to them is, well, get a grip. It's going to happen, as it should be. After two hours of tense testimony, the board held its vote.
Starting point is 00:19:53 All those in favor of denying the plate, please raise your right hand. All is opposed. Motion carries unanimously. The plate is denied. There would not be a Texas license plate featuring a Confederate flag. But then the sons of Confederate veterans sued. Arguing that the state had violated their free speech rights by a targeting speech that they did not like.
Starting point is 00:20:26 Remember, Texas had an open-door policy on specialty plates, which meant that they weren't normally in the business of picking sides. So the state really was singling out the sons of Confederate veterans when it denied their plate. And once again, there was a lot at stake here. George Maynard's Live for Your Die case had established that you could reject the state's messaging if it didn't suit you. But was it okay for the state to reject your message on a state-few? issued license plate.
Starting point is 00:20:53 We'll hear argument first this morning in case 14144. So in 2015, license plates were back in the Supreme Court. John Walker versus the Texas Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. This was a really close decision, a 5-4 split. But the court's majority sided with Texas. The state could deny the Confederate flag plates. The court acknowledged Jerry Patterson's right to display symbols, even abhorrent ones, on say a bumper sticker.
Starting point is 00:21:22 but they said that right does not extend to license plates. Because the Supreme Court held that specialty license plates were government speech. And the government's right to speak is also protected. Justice Stephen Breyer, in his opinion, actually pointed to a kind of legal symmetry with the live-free or die case. Just like a state can't force an individual to display a message. So the sons of Confederate veterans cannot force Texas to convey on license plates, a message with which the state does not agree. Ultimately, the Supreme Court's decision in George Maynard's case didn't resolve all the issues
Starting point is 00:22:02 around license plates, and neither will the Texas decision. Caroline Mala Corbin thinks license plates will always be a contested space, a government-issued document displayed on a private vehicle. It's as if a license plate is a kind of bullhorn, only instead of taking turns speaking, You have both the government and private individuals shouting into the bullhorn. The problem is they're both speaking. And perhaps that's why this little hunk of metal has so often become an ideological battleground, a place for governments and citizens to clash over the identity of an entire state
Starting point is 00:22:40 in its attempt to reduce it to a slogan and symbol speeding down the highway. And those debates are still playing out. The Supreme Court ruling empowered Texas to keep the Confederate flag off its license plates, but it also empowered states to make the opposite choice, and at least six have. If you live in South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, or Tennessee, you can go to your local DMV today and register your car with a state-issued specialty plate bearing a Confederate battle flag. In a couple of those states, Tennessee and South Carolina, lawmakers have actually introduced bills that would ban the flag from specialty plates.
Starting point is 00:23:20 But so far, neither Bill has gotten a vote. And in Idaho, although it might not ever make it to the U.S. Supreme Court, the state's official license plate still raises eyebrows. And, you know, I wish we would change it. And some folks, like Rick Just, are still less than happy about it. I don't think that anybody really thinks it's a bad, evil thing or anything. But, you know, I'm just tired of it. There is no longer a lumpy brown spud on the license plate, but the motto still reads,
Starting point is 00:23:52 famous potatoes. When we come back, reporter Daniel Ackerman takes us into the subculture of license plate collectors. You knew they existed. They do exist. Stay with us. So I'm here with Daniel Ackerman. Hey, Dan. Hey, Roman.
Starting point is 00:24:24 So I know you talked to some really passionate license plate collectors for this story that we ended up cutting out, but can you tell us more about them? Yeah, so amateur collectors are really the keepers. of this history. There's not like a Smithsonian Museum of the American license plate or anything like that. It's just kind of like archived in the basement and attics around the country. Yeah, exactly. And one of those archivists is Stuart Berg. I recently visited Stewart here in Boston to check out his collection because he's been collecting since he was a kid in the 70s. And he said he inherited his first plates from his grandfather. My grandfather had a lot of really cool old cars and there were 21 plates hanging in his garage.
Starting point is 00:25:05 And at one point, I took them all down, and I actually have every one of those plates except one today. And the one that I got rid of, I'm dying to get back. So like every true collector, his collection is perpetually one item short. Yeah. Although he has certainly made up for that missing plate in terms of volume. Because at one point, he told me his plate collection topped 100,000. Whoa. How do you even accumulate that many plates?
Starting point is 00:25:39 Roman, I wanted to know that too, but Stuart was pretty reluctant to give up his sources. Oh, I see. But when it was at its height, his plate collection, it was so thorough that, you know, in the classic car world, someone who wanted an accurate vintage plate to go with their vintage car, they would just call up Stewart. And I wanted every year that if somebody said, hey, I need a three-digit plate from my Buick from 1931. can you can you get me one and i'd have it so when i went to visit stewart we sat out on the pool deck near his condo because of covid um and he rolled out this wagon with two huge plastic tubs completely packed with plates each one was in his own little protective sleeve and he just started
Starting point is 00:26:20 pulling out and showing me some of his favorites starting with some of the earliest state issued license plates which were from the first decade at the 1900s and so what were those like they were really fancy. To me, they actually looked more like fine china than vehicle tags. And that's because they were literally made of porcelain. Well, that seems a little too fragile to go on a car. How does that work? Yeah, well, he was actually pretty proud that he had some without any like chips or dings in them. But, you know, keep in mind at that time, only really rich people owned cars. Like, they weren't even that reliable as a mode of transport, but they were definitely a status symbol. And the license plates kind of played along. There were these smooth, co-bolemen
Starting point is 00:27:00 blue with bold white numbering. And I can actually show you one if you'd like to see it. Here's a 1909 number five. Feel how heavy that is? Oh, yeah. It was registered to a James P. Stearns, 31 Pleasant Street and Brookline Mass for a three-horspower Pope Electric. A Pope Electric? What's a Pope Electric?
Starting point is 00:27:23 It's an electric car. Oh, okay. There you go. So, I mean, this is before combustion took over. They were still experimenting with all these different. types of engines. That's how new the automobile was at the time. Oh, yeah. So I don't know if you caught that, but the license plate number was just five, as in it was Massachusetts' fifth state license plate. That is remarkable. I mean, having, you know, license plate number five has got to confer some bragging rights in the
Starting point is 00:27:50 license plate collection community. Right. It absolutely does. And at the time, it also conferred bragging rights to the owner, like James P. Stearns, he was a bank president. So he was, you know, kind of high society at time. And Stuart also had First Lady Francis Cleveland's license plate, married to President Grover Cleveland, and she was number 44. 44 is pretty good. But I dig it that the era of fancy porcelain plates with low numbers didn't last all that long. No, and that's thanks mainly to Henry Ford and his Model T. Cars got way more affordable in the 19-teens. And in the first quarter of the century, the number of registered cars in the U.S. jumped from 8,000 to more than 18 million.
Starting point is 00:28:32 So as early as 1916, Massachusetts was stamping their plates out of tin, which was way cheaper. So these mass-produced metal plates, they hit the scene. And that's when, you know, license plates, as we talk about in the story, basically become billboards. Right. They become this space where states can play around with graphics and slogans. And Stewart has thousands of examples. So during our interview, he was, you know, pulling out plate after plate after plate. Like, I would try to ask him a question and he would, you know, throw off a one-word answer,
Starting point is 00:29:02 but already be pulling out the next graphic plate to show me. This is a golden jubilee from the state of Washington from 1939. The 36 Wyoming was the first year of the Bucking Bronco. Mount Rushmore in 1952 was on the plate. There was the first year of the state-shaped plate in Tennessee. South Carolina in 1930. They're the iodine state. where they like produce iodine?
Starting point is 00:29:25 Yeah, here's the New York World's Fair. No real graphics, but it does have a lot of words on it. Wow. It's kind of fun to hear all the experimentation that was going on. Like the Tennessee plate was shaped like Tennessee. That's pretty cool. Yeah, he said that one was actually pretty tough to mount on people's cars. I bet.
Starting point is 00:29:43 Yeah, but you know, that experimentation really exploded in the 1970s when State started putting a reflective coating on the license plates. And that basically let them print really, detailed graphics rather than having to like emboss the shapes into the metal. So design's got really busy. And I think that is perhaps best exemplified by the plates that Illinois recently introduced just back in 2017. So let's pull that one up. Oh yeah. Okay. So there's a lot going on here. Yeah. It has the light blue and red of the Chicago flag, which I like. That looks like the top of the state house, I'm assuming. And I know a wind.
Starting point is 00:30:23 Min Mill. Yeah, shout out to rural Illinois. Yeah, because right next to that is the Chicago skyline. And then, of course, at the very far left edge is half a face of Abraham Lincoln. Right. So there's not even enough room for him. He's like split right down the nose. And it has land of Lincoln, of course, which is their motto. What's kind of interesting about this is like, this is kind of the opposite of the Idaho potato problem that we talked about in the piece. I mean, this is not the whole state boiled down into one thing. This is the whole state boiled down into way too many things to put on a license plate. Right. And, you know, it's not pretty because it's not like the canvas gets any bigger.
Starting point is 00:31:02 It's still just this half a square foot and you're cramming ever more onto it. And so what do, you know, people like Stewart, you know, license plate collectors make of, you know, this kind of graphical onslaught. Like, what do they think of this as compared to the old plates? Yeah, I mean, most collectors I talk to expressed a preference for those older plates with the simple, sleek design. But a lot of them also just take the whole thing in stride, because to guys like Stuart, the more the merrier, right? Do you think license plate design has gotten, like, too busy and complicated? No, I don't. Here's a neat plate.
Starting point is 00:31:39 This is one of my favorites. It's the Georgia Peach. What else do I have that I can show you? More graphics just means more plates. It just means more joy for Stewart. Absolutely, yes. Just more grist for the collector's mail. Here's a Texas centennial plate from 1936.
Starting point is 00:32:00 Here's New Mexico, 1940. Great graphics on these. Utah, Center Scenic America in 1942. Ohio in 1938. There's an early graphic plate from Rhode Island. 41 Hawaii. Here's an Oklahoma plate with an F in the middle. That story originally aired
Starting point is 00:32:32 in 2021. It was produced by Daniel Ackerman, edited by Joe Rosenberg, original tech production by Bryson Barnes, remix by Martin Gonzalez, music by Swan Real. Special thanks this week to a whole bunch of additional people we interviewed for this story, including Virginia Scharf, Eugene Volok, Peter Blodgett, Dan Smith, Thomas Wilson, and especially Tennessee State Representative G.A. Hardaway, who has been fighting to get the Confederate battle flag off the state's specialty plates. Kathy 2 is our executive producer, Kurt Colstead is the digital director. Delaney Hall is our senior editor. The rest of the team includes Chris Barrupe, Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Lay, Lashmaidon, Kelly Prime, Jacob Medina Gleason, Talon and Rain Stradley, and me, Roman Mars.
Starting point is 00:33:19 The 99% of visible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. We are part of the Series XM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north, in the Pandora building. In Beautiful. Uptown. Oakland, California. You can find us on all of the usual social media sites as well as our own Discord server. There's a link to that, as well as some pictures of very fun license plates, and of course, every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.

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