Bucky Badger

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Bucky Badger
Bucky Badger

Bucky Badger is the official mascot of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His full name is Buckingham U. Badger and he attends all major sporting events for the Wisconsin Badgers as well as hundreds of other events around Wisconsin every year.

Contents

[edit] Origin

Bucky the badger was first drawn by local Wisconsin artist, Art Evans, in 1940[1][2]. An actual badger from Eau Claire was used at the first few football games that year, but proved to be too fierce to be controlled properly and was retired to the nearby Henry Vilas Zoo. Surprisingly, the school replaced the live badger with a live raccoon named Regdab ('badger' backwards). In 1949, a Bucky head-piece was created and a contest was started to properly name the mascot. The winning entry was, of course, Buckingham U. Badger. An unsuccessful campaign was run in 1987 by an undergraduate from Basking Ridge, NJ to rename Bucky, Brian B. Badger.[citation needed]

In 2006, Bucky was inducted as a charter member of the Mascot Hall of Fame's College Division, joining YoUDee from Delaware and Aubie the Tiger from Auburn.

[edit] Attire and attitude

Bucky wears a cardinal red and white Wisconsin sweater along with a gruff look on his face (the costumed-mascot version is decidedly cheerier, with a beaming smile).

During sporting events, he is generally seen interacting with the crowd, especially the rambunctious student section. For example, during football games Bucky often directs Section O to dance along with the band's music or pretends to pick fights with certain students. He also has a history of playfully fighting other team's mascots like the University of Minnesota's Goldy Gopher or Purdue University's Purdue Pete. Although fighting is no longer allowed by NCAA mascots, Bucky still frequently interacts with other mascots through skits.

Bill Segal was the first costumed Bucky Badger. The original Bucky costume was introduced at a pep rally on Friday, November 11, 1949, before the next day's Homecoming game against Iowa (Wisconsin 35, Iowa 13). Carolyn (Connie) Conrad, a UW art student, designed the original chicken wire and paper mache head. Sagal, then head cheerleader, wore his regular cheerleader trousers and sweater and added boxing gloves.

[edit] Logo

classic Bucky Badger, 1940-2002
classic Bucky Badger, 1940-2002

The modern Bucky Badger logo was part of a group of "comic collegiate badger mascots" created by the Anson W. Thompson Company of Los Angeles in 1940. The company was one of several that manufactured decals and other logowear for universities. The Madison-based Brown's Book Store was the first to order the pose. Other bookstores in the area ordered other poses. (Brown's Book Store has since gone out of business.) The UW athletic department first used the logo on the cover of the 1948 Football Facts and Centennial Sports Review.

That image of Bucky was adopted and used by many local businesses in and around Madison. In 1988 the University of Wisconsin formed a trademark licensing program to register the Bucky logo, which was opposed by local merchants. Ownership was decided in the case University Book Store v. University of Wisconsin Board of Regents. The United States Patent and Trademark Office allowed the UW to register the marks despite previous third-party use on the grounds that the public identified the Bucky Badger logo with the University of Wisconsin.

In 2003, Bucky was given an update, with simplified lines and the "motion W" on his sweater. This might have been done in part to give the University a version of Bucky that was associated with the University alone, and had never been used in any other context. The mascot costume was also updated to feature the motion W.

[edit] Variations

Blind Bucky is sometimes used to represent the University of Wisconsin Law School [1].

[edit] Student portrayal

The students who portray Bucky Badger are all volunteers, despite rumors of full scholarships or financial reimbursement (as is the system in some universities). Every year tryouts are held to find the next students who will don the fur and represent UW-Madison. Tryouts include tests of dancing skills, expressiveness in suit, ability to work with props, and how many pushups a candidate can do, as well as an interview and ability to write and perform an original skit.

[edit] References

  1. ^ ONline Wisconsin - August 2001 (English) (08 2001). Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
  2. ^ Ask Abe Archives - Campus Traditions (English). Retrieved on 2007-01-11.

[edit] External links

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