Happy Holidays and welcome to the first annual BrandFlair Most Manly Holiday Gifts list. Woot! Men are notoriously hard to shop for and when we are asked what we want we usually reply with the usual shrug of the shoulders and “I Dunno.”
The fact is men want manly gifts. Stuff that we think is cool but that everyone else just doesn’t understand. So if you need help shopping for your man take a look through this list and pick out a manly gift for the holidays or any special occasion. Chances are if you think it is weird, he will love it!
Please note that I have linked each gift using Amazon Associates and will donate all proceeds from any BrandFlair Most Manly Holiday Gifts purchases to Fuzzy Friends Rescue in Waco, Texas to help support their fabulous efforts rescuing, caring for, and placing cats and dogs into good homes here in Central Texas. We are looking to adopt a new fuzzy friend from them and it is a wonderful organization if you wish to make a donation.
The BrandFlair Manly Holiday Gift List Revealed on The Bruce Sallan Show!
Audio: BrandFlair’s Most Manly Holiday Gifts on The Bruce Sallan Show – Part 1 (mp3)
Audio: BrandFlair’s Most Manly Holiday Gifts on The Bruce Sallan Show – Part 2 (mp3)
1. Grillin’ & Chillin’ – Smoker and BBQ Gear
Men love food. We love cooking it, serving it and eating it. These four gift ideas are taken from my “Tasty Tips for Fantastic Home Barbecue” post and all are winners. I personally have this Weber Smokey Mountain and Chimney Starter (two actually) and have the gloves and book on my personal manly gift list.
2. Kitchen Gear – Margaritas and Mangos
Yes beer is manly but how many pint glass set do guys really want and need. This margarita machine will crank out fun frozen drinks in the man cave (type and strength is up to you). Margaritas are not manly you say? Not true. Like any good cocktail it is all in the recipe. The mango cutter is something that I picked up and seriously use all the time. Go buy a mango from the store and try cutting it with a knife. You will quickly understand the value in this kitchen tool. Plus it works (unlike apple cutters) and mangos are awesome!
3. Build Stuff – Lego Desk Calendar
During our family trip to Disneyland I found this in the Lego shop. Men love to build things, loved Lego as boys and we never need another desk calendar ever again. I have mine on my desk here at Dell and rebuild it every month. Crazy and cool!
4. Skate Tough – Longboard, Kahuna Big Stick, Chuck Taylors and Helmet
I loved skating when I was younger and still have my board and Chuck Taylors. Classic shoes for a classic sport. Cool thing about this gear is you can get a great workout while chilling out and cruising through the streets. Any man can kick back and enjoy this gear and of course real men wear helmets!
5. iTunes..NOT! – AC/DC Essentials
Fact: AC/DC rules.
Fact: Angus Young is the Honey Badger of Rock n’ Roll.
Fact: You will not find any AC/DC albums or songs on iTunes.
This is because Angus and crew do not believe that the albums should be broken up and songs sold as singles. They also don’t need to sell their music on iTunes. These are the four albums I would buy for your man to rip into his iPod. If you have to pick one…get Back in Black.
6. Protecting His Pack – VueZone (#DadChat Sponsored Item)
Bruce Sallan (@BruceSallan) adds this gem to this years list. One of Bruce’s favorite gift ideas for the season is the VueZone personal video network, a wireless monitoring system that enables families to stay connected to their homes, kids, and pets from anywhere at any time. In a nutshell, VueZone is a system of miniature cameras that stream live video to your smartphone or any PC or Mac. From dads who want to see their families while traveling for business or want to make sure kids are doing their homework while they are out running errands, VueZone makes video monitoring simple.
7. Manly Shows – The Band of Brothers/The Pacifc & The Walking Dead
The Band of Brothers is a classic book to read and hands down the best made for television mini series I have ever seen. This collection includes the newer series about the war in the Pacific and belongs in every mans collection. You will find him watching it again and again for many reasons. It helped me understand a bit more about my grandfather’s (Major Robert L. Boyle Sr.) world as a young man the war he served in.
Zombies hold a special place in the hearts of many men and zombie movies are some of the most popular horror movies ever. Sad thing is many of then are not as great. That all changed when AMC brought Robert Kirkman’s comic series to the small screen. The Walking Dead is a fantastic series packed with zombie punch, bite and drool (the slow type from the classic Night of the Living Dead).
8. Jam Session – Amplitude iRig and American Fender Stratocaster
Every man wanted to be a rock star at some point in their lives. Many still have an old “axe” lying around the house but sadly do not own a working amplifier. The Amplitube iRig is a great gift to get instead of an expensive amp. With iRig you can plug your guitar into your iPhone/iPod touch/iPad and jam anywhere. You can choose to shred on a Marshall or Fender Twin and add effects like distortion, chorus, delay and more! I picked one of these up this year and love it! Headphones are a must add.
For the man who does not have a great guitar but deserves the best, nothing is as classic as the Fender American Standard Stratocaster® Electric Guitar with 3 Tone Sunburst and a Rosewood Fretboard. It is a classic wielded by Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan and one every man would be proud to own. Think of it as the Tiffany of electric guitars.
8. The Power To Do More! – Dell XPS 17 Laptop
I love computers. Fact is (full disclosure) I work for Dell and love it! My current laptop is a robust Latitude loaded with power and goodies and it works great but my personal man gift list would have to include a loaded Dell XPS 17 Laptop. A manly configuration would be an Intel i7-2630QM processor, 8GB RAM, 17.3in FHD WLED AG (1920×1080) Screen, NVIDIA GeForce GT 555M 3GB graphics with Optimus (think games), 1TB 7200 RPM Hard Drive (Say it again – One Terabyte…Aawwww yeah!), Tray Load Blu-ray Disc BD-Combo and Windows 7 – 64 bit OS.
I like the Dell XPS models because they are workhorses for business and fantastic gaming machines in one. What more could a man want? Did I mention One Terabyte? Aawwww yeah!
Finally ordering through Dell is great because you can configure the new XPS or any Dell computer the way you want it to meet your needs. So give a guy “The Power To Do More” and get him an XPS 17. The most spendy item on my list this year but worth it!
9. Tool Time – Dewalt 18v Drill & Craftsman 154 Piece Mechanics Set
Tools and gift cards to Lowe’s and Home Depot are standard man gifts. The problem is most of the tools men get are lawnmowers, leaf blowers, weed eaters and “practical” things that scream “time away from the football game” and “honey do list.” Gift cards 99.9% of the time are spend on home projects that pop up and not on what a guy just wants to buy for the workbench.
Two great gifts sure to please any guy and make him grunt like Tim Allen in Tool Time is the Dewalt 18v Drill and Craftsman 154 piece mechanics tool set. No weekly chore is dependent on on either of these gifts and every man loves power tools and mega uber useful tool sets. You cannot lose gifting either or better yet both of these. Think of them as Nordstrom Bags and Belts for dudes.
10. Fitness & Training – Polar FT4M Heart Rate Monitor
There are many things in life deemed manly by popular culture but let’s face it, working out is not really one of them. Well pop culture is wrong. Taking care of ourselves so we can feel good (and more manly) and live long happy lives to enjoy family and friends is pretty awesome and something I could work on more in 2012. One of my favorite health and fitness Tweeps Heather Frey (@SmashFit) introduced me to the wonders of heart monitors. This thing keeps track of your fitness improvements, heart rate and calories burned. Guys like data and Polar delivers. This is a basic model to get started down the fitness track in 2012 but it is all most guys need anyway to get started. Plus when we all get really in shape and do Iron Man triathlons weekly we can do something else guys like to do. Upgrade technology!
11. Game on! – Wilson NFL Football
Every guy needs a good football. Nuff said!
Thanks to Bruce Sallan (@BruceSallan) of the Bruce Sallan Show and #DadChat for hosting this years live launches of The BrandFlair Most Manly Holiday Gifts via radio and Twitter.
“The Bruce Sallan Show – A Dad’s Point-of-View” is broadcast live each Thursday from 11:06 a.m. – noon, PST and repeated Thursday evenings at 9:06 p.m. and Saturdays at 12:06 p.m. It can be heard on KZSB AM 1290 in Santa Barbara and via live stream over the Internet. #DadChat is every Thursday night from 6:00pm – 7:00pm PST on Twitter.
















John’s (aka @BrandFlair) Birthday Message to the Socialsphere
The past year being engaged in social media with my blog and many new social venues has been for the most part a very pleasurable, rewarding and fun experience. Of course with any endeavor you have the eye opening and rocky moments along the way but I have enjoyed 99.9% of those people I have encountered and engaged with in Social Media. I have also been thrilled to reconnect with so many from my pre-Social Media past and look forward to growing those friendships.
I was going to share a list of good, bad and ugly things I have experienced during my first year but at the last minute decided to instead share my Grandfather’s final letter to the family he sent us on his 90th Birthday. With all that is going on in the world I think my grandfather’s letter can help us pause and perhaps reflect on the things that really matter in our lives.
Through this reflection I challenge each of us to do these three things this next year and especially these next three months.
1) Identify things that truly matter and let go of petty squabbles whether they be online, political, personal, family, or whatever. Do not expend energy on negatives. Expend it on positives.
2) Get back to meaningful, respectful dialogue backed up by solid critical thought instead of quick hits and quips. Bring back the art of conversation via face to face and/or ear to ear. Listen more.
3) Let go of something in the past that rubbed you the wrong way and move on. Forgive but also mend.
I will be the first to put my foot forward to do these growing BrandFlair.com and sincerely hope you enjoy my grandfather’s words and reflections below. Thanks to all of you for making my first year blogging an enjoyable, rewarding and engaging experience. <virtual toast> Here is to year two and beyond. Cheers! – John (aka @BrandFlair).
“On the occasion of one’s 90th birthday, it seems that there should be something in the history to talk about. Well there is, there’s really a huge inventory to chatter about. Then there is the theory that, perhaps, most things should be un-said. I do not subscribe to that theory. So, here goes!
Childhood was much different some 85 years ago, in that we had no radio, and certainly no TV. We had diseases such as diphtheria, typhoid, and flu – all of which came with virtually no medication. And there was no modern refrigeration only the ice box that needed to be “fed” and emptied of the melted ice. There were no super markets, no malls – and above all, very little money. Cars were just beginning to find their way into the economy. Public transport, via street car, was somewhat available. However, things were cheap by present standards. A quart of milk was no more than ten cents. The cheapest item in the meat department was liver, and we had lots of that. Also chipped beef on toast was often on the table, as well as corned beef hash. But, we had lots of eggs and chicken – we raised chickens as almost everyone did. And, my Mom would make the greatest custard pudding.
So, my beloved sister and I began growing up when we moved to a place called Santa Ana. Seems that was about 1924. We lived in a small place across from a church. We liked going to the church because they had picnics at the Orange County Park where one could be on their little lake in a rental boat, and there were hot dogs. There was one occasion that was clouded with our stealing a couple of bucks that were on the mantle that our Dad put there to help pay the rent. We got caught, but with a bunch of discipline, weeping, and wailing we were permitted to go to the picnic. That was a good early lesson! During the time at this first home in Santa Ana was when my sister and I received our first bikes.
Some short period of time later, our parents bought a home on South Main Street. It was an adequate home with a nice garden where we had two orange trees, a grapefruit and fig tree along with a vegetable garden. This was about the time that radio was being discovered as a household item, and Charles Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic. My Dad said, “Robert, some day they will fly across that ocean every day.”
My sister and I went through high school in Santa Ana, she went on to Berkeley. I was not a very good student. I played football on the High School championship teams and one in Junior College, thus three gold footballs. So much for my formal education. The South Main home was the one that I left when I went to work in San Francisco at the age of 19. That was the same year, 1934, that I worked on a Stanley Dollar steamship, the President Coolidge on a 60 day cruise to Japan, China and the Philippines. I had seen so much unrest and poverty during this 60 day travel that I strongly felt the urge to become gainfully employed. That began my 30 year career with Hills Bros Coffee.
After four years working in the factory at Hills, and experiencing most operations, I decided to return to Southern California to pursue and education. However, I was intercepted by Grey Hills who offered me the opportunity to go to Chicago for training as a salesman. I was then sent to Detroit to sell our coffee to stores that never had it before – a real struggle. During this period, the Lord and Grey Hills had much to do about getting me to Michigan in 1938, where I met the “Star” of my life, Stella Marie.
After some three years of selling coffee in Michigan, and virtually opening that market, along came the draft for the army. I was inducted in Michigan, and shipped, as a private, to Camp Wallace, Texas, located 50 miles about South of Houston. I was in Houston on week-end leave when the Japanese hit Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Things got really serious after that, and while I was working as a Company Clerk, my Captain asked me to apply for Officers Candidates School. Thus, without any formal education I followed his suggestion. They must have been in really great need because they did accept me after the second interview. I became a “ninety-day wonder” after much struggle, and seeing so many of my classmates sent back to Corporal rating. I was assigned to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas with a 2nd Lieutenant rating – soon to be a Company Commander in and Anti-Aircraft Battalion, which was attached to the 82nd Anti-Aircraft Group. Things happened quickly as I soon moved to the Group in command for the Group Company.
Now to maneuvers, and into the Group Administration, then assigned as the advanced detachment for our Group to go to The European Theater, London. I went on to the Anti-Aircraft Command in London and “in charge” when all others went to the “Far Shore” for combat leaving me with staff only.
After Germany surrendered, my boss, General Thiele, called to say that he was assigned to establish Shrivenham American University, and that I would assist him and go the Shrivenham to get things going. Another new career was now beginning which included bringing in some of our finest professors in America to the University. Beyond that the establishment of a home for the General along with a General Mess where the entire department heads gathered for three meals per day. All of our regular maintenance service was from German P.O.W’s.
After two terms at the University, I asked the General to go home where I could see my “Stella,” and two year old son that I had never seen. Request granted, and with orders on however, and when I wished to go. I chose a friend, Andy White, to go with me. Andy had been a baritone with the then famous Fred Waring Band.
When we arrived in New York aboard the Queen Mary, December 1945, we were invited to the Lambs Club Christmas Party, a club that only famous actors are invited to join. We attended in uniform (the only dress we had), and were treated as though the two of us had won the war alone. We literally could not carry all the gifts.
I arrived, by train, in Alhambra just a day or so before Christmas, and was met by Stella, Robert Jr., and my parents – a wonderful conclusion to the years overseas. Indeed, a great thrill to see our son who only knew me as “Bud,” the name my parents often used. A great joy to see my “Star” Stella. I was discharged from the Service in April 1946.
Life had greatly changed, and so back to selling coffee when I was assigned to a sales territory in San Francisco. Eventually, we were transferred to Denver where we took our “busy” Robert and freshly born Peter to our 900 sq. foot mansion for a couple of years. When Margaret Mary was born, our Sweetheart of the Rockies, we returned to the Bay Area. Our family fortunes were enhanced by the arrival of Suzanne, and later (via a camping trip) Bill.
My career at Hills continued as Advertising Manager, but not really happily because of general management unrest along with post-war depression. However we did establish what we thought was an adequate home in Orinda which we loved, and where we lived for 26 years while raising five kids on a salary which would amount to a fifth of our living expenses today. I might add that each time a new child was born to us there was “wonderment” in the corridors of the Hills office.
After a 30 year career at Hills as a most loyal employee, the “cards” and Stella said, “lets make a move.” So, we did so, along with much speculation about what was next. Stella was teaching at that time, so along with that The Lord really took over, and we landed on our feet, so to speak. After the kids “flew the coop” we began traveling, and to more than 35 countries. Many wonderful memories!
Our greatest joy, however, has always been our family. We now have the pleasure of five lovely kids, and their eleven children, along with five beautiful “Greats.” So, with this Stella Marie (this Star of the Sea) we are husband and wife for these 62 years, and at this moment, surrounded with the result of this alliance, I can only ask, Dear Lord, how anyone could deserve such a wonderful gift – the gift of all of you, our cherished family. This day, we are truly blessed, and we thank you for your love.”
Major Robert L. Boyle, US Army (Retired)
January 23rd, 2005