Comprised of just three stitched together pieces of cotton, for generations now the t-shirt has functioned as a really basic way of telling the world who and what you are.
Long championed by music fans and politicos alike as a form of self-expression, over the years the humble t-shirt has become a great visual shorthand for promoting – and defending – causes close to your chest.
Now they’re being adopted by another group with a cause: the Manchester hospitality sector.
From late-night pizza parlours to gin bars, mental health coffee shops and hoagie spots, there’s now a glut of businesses in the city working with local artists to create their own design-savvy merchandise – and locals have been quick to snap them up.
It’s not all t-shirts, either. There’s beanies, caps, tote bags, jumpers, hoodies – you name it, someone in the hospitality scene has stuck a design on it and marketed it to their customers during Covid.
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But this is not a vanity project, far from it. Rather, the income stream that merch sales have brought in has been invaluable to struggling Manchester businesses over the past year and a half.
For some, it’s also served as a small act of rebellion against decision-makers they feel have let them down in their time of need.
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Interestingly, some of the earliest people to grasp this within hospitality were the staff themselves.
Bundobust
Bundobust
In October last year, a group of Manchester bartenders got together (virtually, we assume) to ask how the hell they could support and help those that weren’t in as fortunate a position within the hospitality industry.
At the time, many of their fellow employees were losing their jobs and there was only one charity that seemed to be helping them: Hospitality in Action.
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The solution? Sell some merchandise and donate the proceeds to charity.
They quickly moved to create some tongue-in-cheek MAGA-style hats that read ‘Make Bedtime Late Again’ – raising much-needed funds for struggling teammates as well as awareness for their cancel the curfew campaign.
Others were quick to follow.
Manchester’s part-time pizza parlour Crazy Pedro’s commissioned a series of murals outside their venue at the end of 2020 that became synonymous with the hospitality sector’s struggle / Image: Crazy Pedro’s.
At Atlas Bar on Deansgate, a spot renowned for having the best and biggest collection of gin in the city, bosses moved to create their own Premium Small Batch London Dry Atlas Gin as a way to bring the bar back into people’s homes.
They – like many others – also launched a range of “at home” experiences, which quickly got snapped up by customers fed up with supermarket gins.
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“The revenue has created much-needed cash flow, which certainly supported paying bills through lockdown,” acknowledges Managing Director Elaine Wrigley when we chat about the impact of the past year.
But one place in Manchester that has perhaps done more than any other on the merch front is part-time pizza parlour Crazy Pedros, part of The Liars Group.
It all began with customers buying ‘pay it forward’ vouchers, says Nick Coupland, head of marketing and social, when we catch up on how things were during that crazy time in March last year, but things quickly evolved beyond that.
The company has always sold merchandise for Pedros and has long worked with local artist Harrison Edwards on their branding across the group to come up with quirky designs, from pizza boxes that look like actual pieces of art to bespoke cans of Pedro’s Hooch.
NQ64
NQ64
But things really picked up when they started selling their politically charged ‘Buck Foris’ t-shirts in October following the Tier announcements.
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These sold out almost instantaneously, Nick tells us – adding that they saw a 400% increase in sales after releasing the designs online.
For many loyal restaurant fans, buying merch has become an easy way to support their favourite eateries through a series of lockdowns that has left much of Manchester’s hospitality in rags.
The income has been especially important to the city’s many bars and pubs without a food offering, who have spent more of the past year closed than open.
The pizza boxes at Crazy Pedro’s go far beyond the average / Image: Crazy Pedro’s
It’s not been an easy one for the sector. In fact, according to United City, from March 2020 to March 2021 Greater Manchester was only in restrictions equivalent to Tier One for a total of three weeks.
This means, in the space of a year, hospitality businesses (which account for 33% of all employment in Manchester) lost out not just on their all-important Christmas trade, but also Bank Holidays, Pride celebrations, Halloween, and more.
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It’s also perhaps unsurprising that the sudden increase in demand for restaurant t-shirts has aligned with the closing of gig venues and nightclubs.
In a way, going out for dinner has become the new “going out”, and was emphasised all too clearly at Escape to Freight Island’s chaotic KANTINA weekend, which somehow managed to create a queueing system more disastrous than Manchester Pride’s ill-fated 2019 festival.
Whatever the reason, things have certainly changed and, as ever, Manchester is pushing back.
The DIY attitude of the punk era is in vogue once again, and this time it’s Manchester’s restaurants and bars leading the charge.
Feature
Taemin at AO Arena: Take the K-pop world’s ‘Advice’ – you need to watch him live
Thomas Melia
This time last month, South Korean star, SHINee and SuperM boyband member, Taemin showed Manchester the real meaning of ‘The Rizzness’. It was our first K-pop gig and won’t be our last.
Normally, if you ask me what I’m getting up to on a Tuesday night, I’d respond with the usual: “Nothing.” Ask me this random but eye-opening night back in March 2025, and I’d say, “Watching the ‘Ephemeral Glaze’ tour”.
Opening with a song labelled ‘Déjà vu’, ironically, felt from the truth, as the minute the performer stepped onto the stage, the whole crowd was watching what felt like an all-new spectacle come to life – even for some of the already inducted K-pop fans inside the AO Arena.
Following up with ‘Guilty’, I’d be lying if I told you we didn’t love this performance. It wasn’t overshadowed by that unbelievable grand opening either – if anything, it was even better.
A majestic pose from Taemin at AO Arena in Manchester, performing to a lively crowd.Credit: Audio North
This was a setlist that just keeps on giving: after this, ‘Advice’ greets our ears and fans erupt in various screams and cries, to which Taemin, 31, certainly appreciated.
It’s high energy through and through, as the next song, ‘Idea’, felt like the missing piece of the jigsaw puzzle for those of us not so used to this kind of music, well and truly captivating the Manc crowd.
Closing what was merely his opening segment with this song was definitely a good ‘Idea’… (sorry).
Its title may draw from a comedic viral term used to describe someone with great flirting skills, a.k.a. ‘rizz’, but ‘The Rizzness’ is no laughing matter.
Fans caught on quickly, and as soon as the first note was pumped out into the arena, the atmosphere reached whole new heights and those familiar screams at an other-worldly pitch returned.
I never thought I’d see the day where AO Arena screamed, “You know I got the rizz, the rizzness”, but there’s a first time for everything, I guess.
Taemin and his dancers were electric at AO Arena.Credit: The Manc Group
Being from Korea, 31-year-old Taemin tried his best to communicate with the crowd throughout the night, taking breaks after back-to-back performances to gauge the audience’s reactions.
The South Korean superstar didn’t take long to warm up to the crowd and showed off his cheeky side, telling the arena, “Only 4 more songs” before finishing the sentence with “I lied”.
‘Criminal’ had me and the rest of Manchester weak in the knees; the choreography was flawless throughout, but this was a true highlight. Ending with ‘Say Less’, Taemin knew exactly what he was doing, putting a song that catchy right at the end, as this was all that replayed in my head on the train home.
Put it this way, we may still be relative newbies to the world of Korean pop music, but with another big name heading to Manchester, we’re definitely keen to find out more.
The best Manchester-based anime-style memes we’ve seen online as Ghibli craze takes over
Danny Jones
Now, the internet can be used for a lot of silly and pointless things – you might argue us sharing our favourite memes every morning is a prime example of that – but we have to admit, the second we saw a Manchester-inspired Studio Ghibli image on social media, we were hooked.
If you have absolutely no idea what we’re talking about, there is a current craze that has taken over the internet, which has seen recognisable memes and images recreated in the style of the iconic Ghibli anime films, created by legendary animator and filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki.
Once you’ve found one, you tend to start spotting them more and more frequently, and in the case of the chronically online like us, we’ve been inundated with them for weeks now.
People are using AIto create them in various different contexts, but it won’t surprise you to learn that our favourite Ghibli/anime memes are those based around Manchester. For example:
Bloody hell, the internet really is brilliant sometimes, isn't it? 😂 https://t.co/virpFx60u7
As it happens, this was the first and perhaps still the best we’ve seen to date, but it didn’t stop us from falling down an animated rabbit hole looking for others.
To be honest, we didn’t actually have to do much searching ourselves as they’re absolutely all over the algorithm at the minute, and have been for a good month or so.
‘Ghibli memes’ may be an overgeneralisation of what is a rather specific and famed art style, but this ongoing flood of anime-style cartooons is being created by users giving prompts to ChatGPT, the increasingly popular large language model (LLM) and AI tool.
Designed with OpenAI software, the artificial intelligence chatbot can do everything from write extensive study notes and flash cards to fixing blurry images, writing computer code, entire essays and quite literally countless other things.
In this instance, people are just reimagining moments from the zeitgeist and famous memes in this style by feeding the image to ChatGPT, along with an ‘in the style of Studio Ghibli’ prompt.
One for the Blues…And the Reds.All of these images have been designed using ChatGPT. (Credit: Eleventh Minute/centredevils via X)
Pretty cool, right?
You’ll find that footballer Twitter (sorry, X*), in particular, is absolutely full of fan accounts recreating iconic club scenes in the Miyazaki art style, giving their favourite players big ‘Chibi’ eyes (another unique aspect of anime) and so on.
It’s all just a bit of a laugh, after all; even we here at The Manc put ChatGPT to the test back in June 2023 and asked it to design ‘the perfect day out in Manchester’ – to varying degrees of success, we might add.
As ever with machine-learning, the more information you feed it, the better the result and although we know these are original pictures being reimagined, it still goes to show just how impressive and varied AI is becoming.
We’ve also enjoyed some that aren’t necessarily Manc but are quintessential British humour or simply more universal memes.
Exhibits E and F…
Even after all these years, we feel like we still see this in some context at least once a week – and it still makes us laugh.‘What a sad little life, Jane…’Credit: brandsynario (via Instagram)/No Context Brits (via X)
Despite these memes riding a real wave right now, the Ghibli portrait fad is just that; there are plenty of other aesthetics being toyed with, too.
Actually, it already has, as we’ve now started coming across people making action figure versions of themselves and/or famous people, full decked out with accessories inside blister packs and everything.
On the other hand, many people are understandably concerned about what this means for artists and although there is no substitute for genuine human expression, whatever form that may come in, lots of people are railing against it as the possibility of AI-based pop music has been posited.
With that in mind, maybe the best twist we’ve seen is our very own Stanley Chow subverting the trend and doing Ghibli stuff in his equally iconic style. We’ll take these geometric gems over computer-generated imitations any day.
For now, it’s just a bit of fun and we confess we’ve got some light entertainment out of it, but the increasing possibilities being thrown up by AI in terms of art do pose a lot more complex questions.
We’ll finish with one final example because let’s be honest, there’s only really one thing on our minds at the minute – at least until the summer finally rolls around…
Let us know if you’ve seen any other fun examples and what you make of the whole Ghibli meme trend down in the comments.