Skip to main content

Company removes 'rape' shirt listed on Amazon

This shirt, with the slogan
This shirt, with the slogan "Keep Calm and Hit Her," was among those listed for sale on Amazon.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The company that prints the shirts took them off the site
  • The company's founder says it was a mistake and he's "extremely sorry"
  • Amazon, blogger say T-shirts didn't exist, were never available for sale
  • Founder: Company computers created word combinations playing off a slogan

(CNN) -- Twitter users erupted in anger Saturday after discovering shirts listed on Amazon with a slogan that appeared to promote rape and violence against women.

The shirt read "Keep Calm and Rape On" and was available on Amazon's UK website. The company that prints the shirts, U.S.-based Solid Gold Bomb, removed the listing after it was notified of the slogan.

The company also removed a shirt with the slogan "Keep Calm and Hit Her."

Solid Gold Bomb apologized, saying the slogans were computer-generated and the company did not deliberately create them.

House passes Violence Against Women Act after GOP version defeated

Founder Michael Fowler posted a message on the company's website saying he was "extremely sorry" for the issue.

"We simply do not produce poor humor or offensive products," Fowler wrote. "As a father, husband, brother and son, I would never promote such product in our company and it was clear to see this when looking across the millions of T-shirts that we offer or can produce on demand. Had these items ever sold, we would have immediately pulled the series and are doing so on our own and Amazon channels worldwide."

His explanation came too late for many on Twitter who called the shirts "disgusting."

"@solidgoldbomb 1/4 women will be the victims of sexual violence. Yay you for trivialising it so heinously," wrote @Seja75.

"When will industries take responsibility for messages they put into the world?" wrote Twitter user Kate Merrick.

Users also focused their anger on Amazon for listing the shirts. "Amazon fail," tweeted user Richard Machtel.

Amazon's spokesman in Britain, Ben Howes, gave a statement to CNN saying, "I can confirm that those items are not available for sale."

The shirts were never actually printed, explained Pete Ashton, a blogger in Birmingham, England, who writes about the Internet.

Companies such as Solid Gold Bomb offer slogans and designs for their apparel, and they are printed on demand when a customer orders one, he said on his site, iam.peteashton.com.

Beyond vomiting, how to prevent rape

There are more than 540,000 Solid Gold Bomb items for sale on Amazon, which indicates they can't all be waiting in a warehouse for shipment.

"The shirts don't exist," Ashton writes. "All that exists is a graphics file on a computer ready to be printed onto a shirt if an order comes through. Still, you might say, someone had to make that file, to type those words and click save. Not necessarily."

Company founder Fowler says the slogans were started a year ago as a parody of the British wartime slogan "Keep Calm and Carry On," which was intended to encourage Britons to keep up their spirits.

Company computers created a combination of words that played off the slogan, taking into account character length and graphic resemblance to the original phrase, he said.

Said Ashton, "Yes, Amazon shouldn't be advertising these shirts. Yes, Solid Gold Bomb should have checked through their verb list before starting the algorithm. But as mistakes go it's a fairly excusable one, assuming they now act on it."

Check out the latest news from CNN.com

CNN's Per Nyberg in London contributed to this report.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
updated 8:59 PM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
A man who silently stood and stared at a portrait of Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish state, in Taksim Square drew hundreds to his vigil.
updated 2:31 PM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Could the end of the war in Afghanistan be in sight? A flash of hope flickered at the end of the tunnel Tuesday.
updated 11:14 PM EDT, Mon June 17, 2013
Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden is laying low, but that's becoming increasingly difficult. CNN's Ian Lee reports.
updated 9:20 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Chinese netizens are outraged as photos surface of tourists posing with a dying dolphin on Weibo.
updated 6:17 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
A farmer poses in his millet field on January 27, 2011 near the village of Simiri, Niger, where the 2009 food crisis was controlled, thanks to good harvests. The country which still remains at the mercy of food shortages needs more than ever to modernise its ancient agriculture, said officials at the Agriculture ministry.
With global food supply needing to increase by an estimated 70% by 2050, the continent is at the heart of the challenge of food security.
updated 6:36 AM EDT, Mon June 17, 2013
Snipers are doing most of the fighting in one war-torn Damascus suburb in Syria. CNN's Fred Pleitgen finds that death can come any minute.
updated 7:36 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Crossrail construction workers stand near to one of the 1,000 tonne tunnel boring machines during a photocall to mark the breakthrough into the Canary Wharf station box in London's docklands area on May 31, 2013.
CNN's The Gateway goes behind the scenes of the world's major transport hubs, revealing the logistics that keep goods and people moving.
updated 11:37 PM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Those countries in the Middle East that have been spared political upheaval find themselves enmeshed in a different sort of battle of late...
updated 10:14 PM EDT, Mon June 17, 2013
Chris Kreis talks exclusively to CNN's Piers Morgan about his trip on a whale shark's back.
updated 10:32 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Mifalot is an Israeli NGO which brings together children from all backgrounds through football.
updated 8:52 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
File picture showing passengers about to board an Air France plane at Le Bourget, airport, North of Paris in 1946.
From Charles Lindbergh's record-breaking landing to his solar flight, CNN takes a look back at the Paris Airshow's most memorable moments.
updated 6:40 AM EDT, Thu June 13, 2013
Scenes of violent clashes between protesters and police may make visitors to Istanbul think twice. Is it time to cancel your trip?
updated 1:07 PM EDT, Fri June 7, 2013
CNN received more than 1,000 iReports from Turkey in less than a week from people demanding their voices to be heard.
ADVERTISEMENT