JENN McKINLAY: What a wacky week in the book community! A book blogger trademarked the phrase "hot girls read" and the book community has lost their ever lovin' fluffin' minds. And rightly so.
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| Etsy Shop: Dust Jacket Goods |
One glance at etsy.com and I can see hundreds of vendors use that phrase to sell booky merch. So to trademark it is a slap in the face of all the other book merch vendors who've been using the phrase on their notepads, t-shirts, stickers, and such for years.
How is blocking these vendors from using that phrase going to impact the woman who trademarked it? At a guess, not well. Is she really going to spend her days demanding the platform take down all the other vendors by waving her trademark papers? Does she not have anything better to do? At all?
While the book community can never agree on anything, such as favorite book, character, adaptation, and such, if someone goes after one of them, they will get all of them coming for them. Seriously, book lovers are "we ride at dawn" defenders of all bookdom.
But back to the broader discussion of trademarked phrases. In answer to the question "what are some of the wackiest phrases that have been trademarked?" Google returned this:
- "Let's get ready to rumble!": Sportscaster Michael Buffer successfully trademarked this iconic boxing phrase in 1992, allowing him to legally control its use in entertainment, events, and merchandise.
- "That's Hot": Paris Hilton secured the rights to her signature catchphrase in 2007 and even used it to successfully sue Hallmark for printing it on greeting cards without her permission.
- "This Sick Beat": During the 1989 era, Taylor Swift filed a famous trademark on this lyric, along with "Party Like It's 1989".
- "Tiger Blood": Charlie Sheen filed 22 trademark applications in 2011 to lock down his famous interview soundbites, including "Duh, Winning" and "Vatican Assassin".
- "Tebowing": Former NFL quarterback Tim Tebow trademarked the act of kneeling and praying in a pose that became a viral internet meme.
- "Let's roll": The phrase—famously spoken by Todd Beamer on hijacked United Flight 93 on September 11, 2001—was trademarked by his foundation to protect it and sell merchandise with proceeds going to charity.

Of course, hot girls read! Right now I am at Bradley Field, yes it's 3:30 am. I am waiting for my flight to Michigan for my aunt's 90th. birthday party. Driving me here, Irwin said, "Pay the extra $200 next time and take a flight at a reasonable time." He might have a point. Duncan Donuts opens at 4:00. Coffee!!
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I don't understand how people can trademark phrases, it's hard enough to protect real ideas. Anyway, this "hot girl" has packed lots of books!
Hope you are feeling better, Jenn.
My initial thought was to say, "That's all rather silly;" generally, it feels a bit mean-spirited . . . but then I thought about writers and AI and all of that mess and figured that, if I were a writer, I might really consider getting a trademark/copyright for something like my series characters simply to keep them away from AI . . . .
ReplyDeleteI hadn't heard about the hot girls read kerfuffle, but I think trademarking phrases is stupid. It's language, and language belongs to everyone.
ReplyDeleteFrom Celia: I'm clutching my head in despair, and I'm against this type of pettiness. Luckily I am very lightly attached to social media and have chosen only to blog with JRW whose kindness and encouragement has been an absolute gift from this community.
ReplyDeleteOn a more serious note it seems that a trademark whose job is to identify a serious business (such as Duncan Donuts whose colored heading stands out calling us to coffee) has no place in an AI catch phrase world simply leading to more 'stolen' materials such as the time authors have just to spend protecting their work from AI etc. can't help thinking of the current phrases we use daily, Edith is correct, it's stupid and language belongs to us all.