Geekshirts are awesome and all, but they make me a way too easy target for stereotyping, so for me those kind of shirts would only be allowed to wear in my own house or at geek conventions. So instead, I wear shirts that are geekish, but only to people who recognise it as what it is, and who are therefore a geek themselves. Which obviously makes the whole stereotyping thing a lot less worse. For example, I have a shirt with this [http://www.google.nl/imgres?imgurl=http://i592.photobucket.com/albums/tt5/hex1009/smiley.jpg&imgrefurl=http://quizilla.teennick.com/stories/11935552/how-to-destroy-twilight-and-its-characters-in-8-easy-steps&usg=__Pf12wIogMgxR2lrAgkEJKO13TYU=&h=300&w=300&sz=15&hl=nl&start=0&sig2=UVSSE4vVUNvy7NV6cO_nXA&zoom=1&tbnid=YP01YrCrzFIoZM:&tbnh=161&tbnw=161&ei=0zwKTa2mG8zsOafh7JIG&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dfag%2Bsmiley%26um%3D1%26hl%3Dnl%26biw%3D1045%26bih%3D464%26tbs%3Disch:1&um=1&itbs=1&iact=hc&vpx=136&vpy=75&dur=1921&hovh=225&hovw=225&tx=141&ty=59&oei=vTwKTe6RCo-o8QPGuZQZ&esq=3&page=1&ndsp=8&ved=1t:429,r:0,s:0] print, and one with a Triforce in it that almost looks like some random tribal tattoo thing. I still don't wear those for job interviews obviously, but you get the point.