Spot of tee: How a KC teacher scored big when Ted Lasso sported a ‘Joearthur Gatestack’ shirt

April 29, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Brendan Curran, Three KC, Joearthur Gatestack

The story behind a Kansas City-designed T-shirt celebrating local barbecue culture has more meat to it than any given ’que joint’s combo platter, Brendan Curran said. 

“We met playing basketball in the eighth grade,” Curran, founder of local apparel company, Three KC, said of his childhood friend, Jason Sudeikis, Overland Park-native, actor, comedian, and current star of the Apple TV series “Ted Lasso.”

The streaming series — which sees a fictional Kansas college football coach hired to lead a professional soccer team in England — sent sales of Three KC’s “Joearthur Gatestack” tee sailing toward the goalposts when Sudeikis wore it on screen late last summer — after inspiring Curran to design it in the first place.

Jason Sudeikis and Brendan Curran

Jason Sudeikis and Brendan Curran

“I was tagging along with him at a ‘Big Slick’ event,” Curran recalled, noting a local reporter pressed Sudeikis to answer one of Kansas City’s most loaded questions: his go-to spot for the city’s beloved barbecue. 

“I think he said, ‘Oklahoma Gates,’ and I thought it was pretty funny,” Curran said, musing about the TV star’s deft dodge by combining two well-known brands, Joe’s KC (formerly Oklahoma Joe’s) and Gates. “We laughed — because asking someone’s favorite barbecue in Kansas City can stir up a lot of emotions.”

When Sudeikis returned to Kansas City for the Big Slick charity event the following year, Curran — a Saint Thomas Aquinas High School statistics and digital design teacher by day — had gone all-in on Three KC, a side hustle through which he saw designing his own T-shirts as an effort to celebrate the city. Curran was hopeful he could offer locals something different than what was already in the market. 

Jason Sudeikis on "Ted Lasso"

Jason Sudeikis on “Ted Lasso”; screenshot by spotern.com

“I asked [Sudeikis], ‘Would you wear any of these?’ And he ended up wearing [the ‘Joearthuer Gatestack’ shirt] to the big show they do,” Curran recalled, noting the attention generated some buzz in the short-term and the friends went on with their lives. 

A few months later, Sudeikis turned up on the set of ‘Ted Lasso,’ wearing the shirt once more. 

“They were like, ‘Hey man, you can’t wear that shirt; we don’t have permission to wear that shirt,’ and he was like, ‘No, I think it’ll be OK,’” Curran laughed, adding he eagerly signed waivers to approve the shirt’s appearance in the series, opening a floodgate of sales. 

Click here to buy one of the shirts or to browse other designs by Curran.

Joearthur Gatestack tee at Made in KC Midtown

Joearthur Gatestack tee at Made in KC Midtown

“I really think they’re just doing their part to celebrate the city,” he said of celebrity locals like Sudeikis and ways they and efforts like the Big Slick have elevated Kansas City apparel companies — most notably Charlie Hustle, which received a 2014 boost from the Kansas City Royals and actor Paul Rudd. 

Behind the design

Three KC is a Kansas City Clothing Brand started by Brendan Curran in 2019.  The brand was inspired by the Three Kings of Kansas City: que, crown, and arrow. If you claim KC, you likely have strong feelings about  BBQ and sports.

Brendan is a husband to Casey, dad of 3 boys, a high school Statistics and Digital Design teacher, coaches high school basketball, and the founder of Three KC.  His lifelong love of sports uniforms, sneakers, logos, signs, and having been a Kansas Citian since 1984 inspired his creation of the Three KC brand.  

Three KC designs are 100 percent original designs created by Brendan Curran.

“When Jason wears my shirts, it’s because he likes them. He’s a good enough friend [that] he wouldn’t wear them if he didn’t like them,” Curran laughed. “I think they really just do it out of love and to celebrate Kansas City.”

And although Curran is grateful to have the support of his friend, such attention for Three KC hasn’t come without conflict, he added. 

“People are stealing the designs,” Curran revealed, noting he’s found inauthentic copies of his work up for sale on such sites as Amazon and Etsy. 

“It’s a challenge, because I’ve got intellectual property on a lot of these, but at the same time — I don’t have the financial backing to go after every single person that rips off the design.”

While most sellers comply with Curran’s request to cease and desist, others have doubled down on their efforts to cash in on the design, he said. 

“One guy on Etsy was pretty competitive about it. That was frustrating,” Curran said. “I’m just trying to protect what’s mine. I’m not retiring off this money, but at the same time, I have enough pride in what I do that I’d like to protect it.”

As Three KC finds its footing as a brand — suddenly earning a spot among the city’s most sought-after makers — Curran said he plans to keep operations small, instead focusing on creating quality designs that celebrate Kansas City in unique, out-of-the-box ways. 

“I still really enjoy my teaching and coaching job. I’m not under pressure. I’m just designing stuff,” he said. “It gives me the freedom to only put out designs I really like and I’m proud of. So, right now, I’m pretty happy.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Royals roll out the blue carpet for entrepreneurs with campaign focused on small businesses that define KC, its fandom

        By Tommy Felts | March 16, 2023

        Editor’s note: The Kansas City Royals is an advertiser with Startland News, although this report was produced independently by Startland News’ nonprofit newsroom. Kansas City’s hometown baseball team is coming to the plate with a new pitch as opening day nears: a marketing campaign for the Royals that puts its city, fans and inspiring local…

        Made in KC reveals plans for Barrywoods shop in the Northland (and where it’ll open next)

        By Tommy Felts | March 15, 2023

        Made in KC is intentionally growing where local demand takes it, said Keith Bradley, detailing the brand’s expansion plans that hinge on customer convenience and include a new store in a prominent Northland shopping center.  “We realized that we don’t have a strong presence in the Northland,” said Bradley, a co-owner of Made in KC…

        Zach Anderson Pettet, Money 20/20, Cordell Carter II, Aspen Institute Socrates Program, Terri Bradford, Federal Reserve of Kansas City, and Donald Hawkins, kinly, at the C3KC “Fintech is Revolutionizing Banking” session

        National pain points meet local solutions at C3KC; How ‘energy of the day’ can spark lasting change

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        Editor’s note: The Junior League of Kansas City — through its C3KC conference — is an advertiser with Startland News. Fostering conversations about the most-pressing concerns facing communities not only helps expose the best of Kansas City innovation, said Becky Haddican, it also serves as a catalyst for even greater collaboration in the future. Now in…

        AI-generated bedtime stories are just the first chapter in JQ Sirls epic venture to make the publishing industry more inclusive

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        Every great children’s story deserves the opportunity to be published, JQ Sirls said, adding his own footnote that more people are qualified than they think to create them.  “I could put 1,000 people in one room and tell them all to write a short story about their childhood. While many of them may have a…