The three categories of bad gifts for dads are: 1) Gag gifts, which are not funny and are a waste of money; 2) Objects, tools, or gadgets that the dad has never used before, as dads have already selected the types of things they will use; 3) Gifts that are actually for the giver (e.g., the wife) rather than the dad.
Gag gifts are considered bad for dads because they are not genuinely funny, often require explanation, and are quickly forgotten. Dads typically pretend to like them to avoid hurting feelings, but they are a waste of money and time.
Buying a dad a gadget he has never used before is problematic because dads have already decided on the types of tools or gadgets they will use in their lives. Introducing a new type of item is unlikely to be adopted, as it requires a major lifestyle change.
An example of a gift that is actually for the giver is a 'beard bib,' which is designed to catch beard trimmings and prevent sink clogs. While the wife may appreciate it, the dad is unlikely to use it and sees it as a gift for her convenience rather than his enjoyment.
The best type of gift to buy for a dad is something he already likes. Most dads have a limited number of interests (typically 3-4), and sticking to those preferences ensures the gift will be appreciated. Trying to introduce new interests or 'expand horizons' is unnecessary and often unwelcome.
Matt Walsh believes that dads rarely adopt new hobbies or interests. If a dad does attempt to try something new, it is usually short-lived, and he will likely abandon it after a few weeks or months. This is why buying gifts outside of a dad's established interests is generally ineffective.
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Learn more at apu.apus.edu slash military. Out of the kindness of my heart and an abundance of Christmas joy and generosity, I'm going to help anyone who's still trying to figure out what sort of gift to buy for any dad in their life for Christmas or any other gift-giving occasion. Also be helping out all the dads out there by hopefully rescuing them from the plague of bad gifts that we dads suffer from by the millions across the globe every year. It is the silent epidemic.
that nobody talks about, but today it ends. So we're gonna run down a list of some of the most popular and common categories really of dad gifts. To celebrate the Christmas season, Daily Wire Plus is offering one final chance to take advantage of the best sale of the year. That's 50% off annual memberships to Daily Wire Plus and get a free $20 welcome gift. You might be wondering, what do I get with my Daily Wire Plus annual membership?
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These are gifts that you just simply should not give your dad or your husband, even if you've given him this kind of gift in the past and he claimed that he liked it. We're always going to pretend that we like anything you give us. That doesn't mean we actually do. So let's go through some of these. And at the end, I'll also tell you which gifts you should buy. So I won't just leave you with the negative. We'll get to the contrived.
constructive part of it. But as for the bad gifts, there are really three categories. Okay, these are bad gifts for a dad. Bad gifts category number one. Anything that qualifies as a gag gift. Now, dads have been the primary recipients of gag gifts since the beginning of time. The entire gag gift market is kept afloat by our wives and children buying this crap for us. Like, no one else gets the gag gifts as much as
as we do. Across the world, like $9 trillion are spent on gag gifts every year. I don't know if that's the exact number, but I'm sure it's something around there. And all that money is a waste. You're wasting money and our time on a thing that we will open and pretend to find vaguely amusing and never think about again. There are a million examples of this sort of thing, but here's just one. This was apparently featured on Shark Tank at one point. The toilet timer! Oh, no! Ha ha ha!
- Oh, hell no, man. What the fuck? - The gag is that it's a timer that you keep on the toilet so that I guess you can keep track of how long it takes you to finish your business. I don't know. Now what's the problem with it? It's the same problem with any gag gift. It's just not that funny. Like why isn't it funny? Well, because the companies that make cheap novelties are not comedic masterminds. If you're a true comedy like genius, you're not working at the toilet timer company. You're not getting a job coming up with wacky slogans for mugs or t-shirts.
or ties. The people producing this stuff aren't funny and so we're not amused, which is why whenever your dad or your husband opens a gag gift, you've probably noticed he always has the same reaction. He goes like,
And then you have to spend the next five minutes explaining why it's funny. So the real gift here, I guess, is that we get to listen to you explain a joke. A joke that, by the way, really doesn't need explaining. You have to explain it. It's not good, chief. Number two, here's another for the bad gift column. Do not buy the dad in your life any kind of object, tool, gadget, gizmo, instrument, gadget.
that you haven't seen him use before. By the time we become dads, we will have already picked all of the types of things that we will ever want to use ever. We are not adding any more things. Here's the important part. That's not to say that we will have all of the things we will ever use. I said we've selected all of the types of things. Your job as the gift giver is to figure out what types of things your dad or husband uses
and buy him something within that type. For example,
If you've never seen him wear a watch before, don't get him a watch. He's not a watch guy. A watch is a type of thing that didn't make the cut in his life. If he likes coffee, but you've never seen him in your entire life use a French press, don't get him a French press. He's not a French press guy. He's not going to start to become one just because you buy him one. That's asking too much. That's a major lifestyle change. This goes especially for any kind of electronic gadget. You know, if you've never seen him use a tablet.
They made all them tablets? Don't get him an iPad. It's a nice gift. It's an expensive gift. He thanks you for it, but he'll never use it. He appreciates the idea of it. He likes it in theory, maybe, but he won't use it. He just doesn't use that type of thing. If you've never seen him wear slippers, don't buy him slippers. He's not a slippers guy. I'm a slippers guy. Slippers are, for me, are a great gift. But
Only because that type of thing has made it onto my roster, you see. If you've never seen him use any kind of electronic back massager thing or whatever. Again, don't buy him one. He doesn't use that type of thing. These are not bad gifts per se. They could be amazing gifts. But only if it's a type of thing that has already made it onto your dad or husband's menu of things that he uses. Don't try to add to the menu. Now...
There is a wrinkle here that I have to mention. It's possible that a man may try to expand into a new type of thing. But if that's the case, you'll know it because he'll announce it to you. You'll be excited about his journey into a new thing. The new thing probably won't take. He probably won't stick with it or remain interested in it for very long. But for a few months or weeks, he'll be very gung-ho about it. For instance, I use the example of a watch. Well, in fact, I am thinking about becoming a watch guy.
Never worn one before. Randomly, I decided one day, maybe I'll do the whole watch thing. I told my wife. I was excited. I told her because she was asking me Christmas gifts. I said, yeah, you can give me a watch if you want. She said, watch? You're not a watch guy. And I said, I know, but we're going to try this out. I'm going on the watch journey. Who knows where it'll lead? Let's get crazy. Let's throw caution to the wind. Try this whole watch deal. See what the fuss is about. So she'll probably buy me a watch. I'll wear it once and never again in my life.
That's how it goes when a man tries to expand. So it's sort of the exception that proves the rule. Being a husband, father, and host of my own show means that life never slows down. Now imagine trying to eat 31 different fruits and vegetables every day in the midst of your busy life. Sounds miserable, sounds time-consuming, but with Balance of Nature Fruits and Veggies, there's never been a more convenient dietary supplement to ensure you get a wide variety of fruits and vegetables every day
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Finally, this is a note for wives specifically. Don't buy your husband a gift that's really a gift for you. We see what you're doing. We're on to you. We know what game you're playing. Ladies, I'll give you an example. My wife, usually an expert level gift giver, truly a master of the craft, she can still occasionally try to sneak one of these things past me. So recently, she gifted me something that is called, and I'm not making this up, a beard bib. So this is a large bib.
Yes, a bib that you wear when you're trimming your beard and it attaches by suction cups to the mirror in the bathroom. You wear it around your neck and it goes to the mirror.
All right, guy. And the idea is that it catches the beard trimming so that they don't clog up the sink. This is the gift my wife gets. Why did she give me this generous gift? Well, because she is tired of the sink being clogged with beard trimmings. I, on the other hand, am not tired of it. I think it's fine. I think it's not a big deal. So this is a gift that she bought for herself.
It's also something that I, in a million years, would never use. You could put a gun to my head and tell me to choose between a bloody death or the beard bib, and I would take death.
and it would not be a hard decision. So the beard bib violated basically every rule I've just laid out. It's a type of thing I've certainly never used and would never use, and it's a gift for my wife, not for me. I'll let it slide because my wife bats like 900 with gifts, but still, it's the sort of thing you don't want to do. So what gift should you buy the dad in your life? And I'll tell you, and this may sound like an unhelpful answer, but it is the answer. Just buy him something that he likes. - He'd take that back.
That's it. Every dad has about three, maybe four things that he likes. No dad likes more than five things. Five is the top. Some like fewer than three. There are dads who only like one thing, but usually it's like three, three to four. That's the average. So for example, I'll give you another example. My dad
likes to eat at Ruby Tuesday. It's one of the three things he likes. Ruby Tuesday, it's not my thing. I don't quite understand his brand loyalty to Ruby Tuesday. - You sure about that? - But that's fine. My dad likes it. So over the years, I have probably given him a gift card to Ruby Tuesday for probably like 20 different gift giving occasions. And so my wife, she'll, you know, every year she'll look at that and say, you know, it's hard to figure out what to get your dad. And I say, what do you mean it's hard? He likes Ruby Tuesday. What's complicated about this? Is that hard?
this is what he likes. Just get him that. See, when people say that their dad or husband is hard to shop for, what they mean is that it's hard to find them a gift other than the three kinds of gifts that he likes. And these are, they feel like they need to switch it up, get creative, expand his horizons. No, we don't want our horizons expanded. We've set our horizons exactly where we want them and they will stay there until we die. And that's it. All that said,
We don't care that much, so you really just get whatever you want. It's fine. I mean, in truth, if we want something, we'll just buy it for ourselves anyway, so the whole thing is sort of pointless. Even so, for the record, these are the gift-giving rules, and these are the dad gifts that are today canceled. Merry Christmas to you!
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