Oversized Stanley Mugs - please explain
Oversized Stanley Mugs - please explain
Author
Discussion

Roger Gerbil

Original Poster:

3,671 posts

258 months

Yesterday (17:25)
quotequote all
I have seen a growing trend of people carrying around these ridiculous oversized Stanley mugs - this week someone brought one into a business meeting.

Can someone explain the purpose of these things and why there is a sudden craze? Does a bottle not do the same thing.?

Badda

3,532 posts

104 months

Yesterday (17:28)
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Sudden? These have been de rigeour for some people for at least 3 years.
Like anything, it’s just a fashion statement.

Twizy Warren

156 posts

8 months

Yesterday (17:30)
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Would this be more appropriate in the Council Thread?

Cold

16,359 posts

112 months

Yesterday (17:30)
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They're to highlight how old and curmudgeonly you have become. thumbup

Sheets Tabuer

20,886 posts

237 months

Yesterday (17:32)
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I simply couldn't hydrate without mine.


AB

19,432 posts

217 months

Yesterday (17:52)
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With looking after yourself and staying hydrated now suddenly becoming more important than ever before it is important to demonstrate that you are doing so along with wearing your gym clothes to make sure people know you have just been to the gym or plan on doing so at some point during the day.

How did you not know? Top tip, I 'get my steps in' and saved £50 by not having one of these and walking to the water cooler multiple times a day.

andrew-6xade

247 posts

25 months

Yesterday (18:47)
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Early warning device for a

vikingaero

12,169 posts

191 months

Most people these days care about what others think about them, or they think having something materialistic and matching everyone else brings a sense of belonging - all £45 worth of belonging.

Others like me think that a couple of thin crinkly plastic water bottles from an Aldi 12 pack is cool. biggrin

smithyithy

7,765 posts

140 months

This channel did a pretty good review of the fad..


Gary29

4,824 posts

121 months

Some I work with has one, brags about paying £40 for it. I can't explain, each to their own.

Hugo Stiglitz

40,460 posts

233 months

smithyithy said:
This channel did a pretty good review of the fad..

Selfies with the mug for $10? Wtf.

Wtf.

Blib

47,037 posts

219 months

Hydration is for wimps.

JMGS4

8,877 posts

292 months

Another very childish californian "fashion".....

AlexGSi2000

692 posts

216 months

Anyone remember the Sports Direct mugs from around 15 years ago?

Could fit about a litre of coffee smile

As for the craze, could you actually be arsed?

Edited by AlexGSi2000 on Wednesday 4th February 09:51

Alorotom

12,661 posts

209 months

My daughter (11) has probably 8-9 different Stanley cups in various sizes but mainly 30 and 40 oz

They’re not particularly expensive and it’s harmless and if it makes kids want to drink water I’m all for it.

Lots of people in the head office for the company I work for use them, loads of people had them on the train to/from london last week. They’re just a popular addition right now.

Liamjrhodes

359 posts

163 months

they go with the modern emphasis of always having a drink of water with you at all times. I really don't know how we all survived in the past leaving the house without a drink of some kind

MrWideFit

158 posts

12 months

I have a cheap copy one from B&M which cost something like £4 for a 1.2 litre bottle that i can have handy on my desk and keeps my liquids cool/hot for longer

No other genuine reasons

normalbloke

8,428 posts

241 months

Contigo. Nothing else comes close for quality or value.

Faust66

2,356 posts

187 months

Woman I work with has one of the huge Stanley mugs...

She's had health problems in the past as she wasn't drinking enough water (ended up in hospital a couple of times!), so fair play to her for taking her health seriously and making sure she gets enough fluid on board every day (no seedy comments, please).

Apparently a lot of people in her age group (she's 18) have had similar issues as they were just used to drinking energy drinks all day and nothing else. Anything that gets people drinking water is not bad thing IMO.

I use a Sigg 1 litre bottle in the office (got a couple of them): 7 years old or so and have been a faithful companion on hundreds of hiking trips so they've paid for themselves many, many times over

Bonefish Blues

34,280 posts

245 months

normalbloke said:
Contigo. Nothing else comes close for quality or value.
Had never heard of them so right clicked and searched. I learned that they make 'Bottles for the go-getters and ambitious front-runners' which made me giggle a bit smile