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Saints Wire on MSNSaints celebrity fans: Who wears the black and gold on Sundays?Which celebrities are New Orleans Saints fans? These big names in the arts, sports, and media wear black and gold on Sundays.
When the Saints are playing, the "Who Dat" chant resounds around New Orleans. This season, fans can also wet their whistles with a Who Dat beer.
Who Dat?!: Songs For The New Orleans Saints When the Saints captured the NFC Championship two weeks ago, music roared from every neighborhood and spontaneous brass-band parades shut down streets ...
Residents say the phrase "Who Dat" is part and parcel of New Orleans culture. The chant opens Saints football games, and "Who Dat" can now be found on T-shirts and storefronts throughout the city ...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A court fight is escalating over who owns the rights to ``Who Dat?'', as the NFL and the New Orleans Saints filed trademark counterclaims against the company that made a ...
The tradition was codified in 2010, but New Orleans Saints fans have been crying out "Who Dat?" since long before then. According to the Times-Picayune,the "Who Dat?" rallying call first ...
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Real New Orleans Saints? Atlanta Falcons ask 'Who Dat?' - MSNThe Atlanta Falcons face a New Orleans Saints team on Sunday that has had wildly-different results in its first-three weeks.
When the Saints captured the NFC Championship two weeks ago, music roared from every neighborhood and spontaneous brass-band parades shut down streets: New Orleans rhythms exploded across the city ...
The term "Who Dat" was a borrowed phrase with a proud history that can be traced all the way from the Seventh Ward to the Caesars Superdome.
“Two Dat” may be an easier trademark to justify, Emerson said, because it hasn’t been in the public lexicon and refers to a specific scenario: the Saints winning their second Super Bowl.
NEW ORLEANS — In New Orleans -- there’s a chant no good Saints fan could ever forget. The origin of the term “Who Dat” can be traced back more than 160 years.
NEW ORLEANS — The fight over who owns the phrase "Who Dat" continues. Now, the company that sued the NFL and multiple local T-shirt shops in 2010 is turning its focus to a fan merchandise store ...
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