Detroit is part of a new online alphabet for all the wrong reasons.

The city's congressional district, Michigan District 13, forms part of a lumpy "R" in Gerry, a new font made using congressional districts across the country.

The font, available for free online, turns misshapen and heavily gerrymandered districts into an entire alphabet. The project highlights states like Michigan, Texas and North Carolina, with repeat offender states like Illinois and New York.

Michigan's District 13, represented by U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, is paired with Ohio's District 10 to form the "R."

Gerry's creators came up with the font after a June U.S. Supreme Court decision ruled the federal government has no part in redistricting, and the issue should be left to states and voters.

More: U.S. Supreme Court rules on gerrymandering, halts move to redraw Michigan political boundaries by 2020

The Illinois-based team noticed how their own "janky" Illinois 4th District wasn't the only oddly-shaped gerrymandering victim, and wanted to create "digital graffiti that voters and politicians can’t ignore."

"To ensure the eroding of democracy isn’t an issue that is lost in the news cycle, our design team from Chicago concocted a creative way to keep our warped voting districts top-of-mind," Gerry creators said in a statement.

The font's Twitter account calls out legislators for their gerrymandered districts as it highlights each letter, tagging each district's representative in each corresponding tweet. For Michigan, it tweeted: "We couldn't have made this gerrymandering font without your "R." Here's to you, #OH10 & #M13! pic.twitter.com/lnlXEV3k9a"

Some of the alphabet's letters are made of single districts, which form improbable letters like "U" and "W."

"Tweet Congress and let them know how happy you are your vote doesn't matter," the font's Twitter bio instructs users.

Michigan's district lines have been hotly debated along party lines. In April, a federal judiciary panel sided with Michigan Democrats, who argued that Republicans had redrawn districts in their favor after the 2010 census.

The three-judge panel ruled that the state Legislature must redrawn district lines, which it said are unconstitutionally gerrymandered, for about three dozen congressional and state legislative seats by Aug. 1. If it didn't, the panel said it would redraw the districts itself.

The U.S. Supreme Court granted Michigan a stay on redrawing the districts in May, after Republicans argued that the panel hadn't granted enough time for the redrawing, and that the ruling impinged on state sovereignty.

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