Tag Archives: Dallas

Owner With His Head In the Sand?: Redskins Name Controversy Returns

“Old enough now to change your name.  When so many love you is it the same?”  Cowgirl In The Sand by Neil Young

Dan Snyder, owner of the Washington Redskins, (the capital’s storied NFL franchise), is no trademark neophyte.  An entrepreneur since his college days, Snyder has lifted the Redskins franchise to become one of the most valuable teams in sports.  Snyder reaps a fortune selling jerseys and other merchandise emblazoned with the REDSKINS name and logo–a profile of a Native American man. 

So with these invaluable trademarks fueling the engine of his success, it’s no surprise that Snyder waited until  all of Washington’s trademark professionals  flocked to arch rival Dallas before opening the latest chapter in the ongoing controversy over the REDSKINS name.  While lawyers from private practice and the USPTO were convening convivially in the shadow of Jerry’s Jones’ opulent new Texas stadium, Snyder defiantly declared to USA TODAY–“We will NEVER change the Redskins name.” 

Long simmering charges that the name is racist and disparaging to Native Americans bounce off Snyder like raindrops beading off a freshly waxed car.   He insists that the name only refers to his football team, and has lost any disparaging or barbaric connotations it once may have had.  And public opinion polls are like the buffet table at the Club Level of Fed EX Field–there is something for everyone, with surveys supporting each sides’ take on the name.

So Snyder would rather fight than switch. 

And the fight over the federal trademark registration for REDSKINS, once thought to be over, has returned.  Back in 1992, Native American groups and individuals petitioned the USPTO to cancel the REDSKINS trademark, alleging that the name is disparaging.  The Lanham Act, the federal trademark statute, forbids registration for disparaging marks.  The petitioners won round one, but ultimately lost on a procedural issue; the reviewing courts ruled that they had waited too long to bring their challenges. The Supreme Court declined to take up the issue.  Now, however, there’s a fresh case. This time the petitioners are younger and claim that they could not have acted sooner. 

The new case is again pending before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB).  The TTAB, however, only has the power to cancel the REDSKINS federal trademark registration, not stop the team from using the name.  Losing the TTAB case would be a setback, and could affect the team’s rights in dealing with counterfeit merchandise, especially imports. But is wouldn’t be a mortal blow; it would not force the REDSKINS to change their name. 

For the petitioners and their supporter, the real issue goes beyond whether Snyder gets to keep his certificate of registration.  One can easily think of  several antiquated and pejorative  nicknames for ethnic or racial groups that would be offensive if used as the name of a sports franchise.  How is REDSKINS any different, opponents of the name ask?

Abe Pollin, the beloved civic leader and owner of city’s basketball franchise had no qualms about changing its name from the Bullets to the Wizards when he felt that naming a team after a lethal projective sent the wrong message in a city then plagued by gun violence.  And surely, measures could be taken to honor tradition and preserve the essence of the football team’s  brand while eliminating a term that some, perhaps even many, find offensive.   Who remembers that the KNICKS are really the Knickerbockers and the METS really the Metropolitans? What would be lost in the long run by similarly calling Snyder’s team simply the SKINS? 

Snyder, however, insists his conscience is clear and that the name will “NEVER” change.  It may be good business.  But whether it’s right is a question that trademark law can’t answer.

QUOTE OF THE DAY:  “People who work together will win, whether it be against complex football defenses, or the problems of modern society.”  Vince Lombardi

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INTA The Great Wide Open

“Have you ever seen Dallas from a DC-9 at night?” Dallas by The Flatlanders

When you think of Dallas, many images snap to mind. The grainy, jarring frames of Abraham Zapruder’s home movie, Lee Harvey Oswald doubled over from the blast from Jack Ruby’s pistol, Tom Landry stalking the sidelines of the Cotton Bowl in his suit, tie, and hat, the portrait of Jock Ewing hanging over Miss Ellie’s mantle at Southfork, Tony Romo’s smirk, Larry Hagman’s devilish grin as JR Ewing over two generations of Dallas, the soap opera.

Trademarks, however, are not top of mind when you land at DFW or Love Field, not even as you make your way to the flagship Nieman Marcus in downtown Big D.

But here in Dallas this week in May, almost 10,000 trademark professionals–in-house corporate lawyers, outside counsel, Internet and domain name specialists, and flocks of experts and service providers–have descended on Dallas for the 135th International Trademark Association Annual Meeting.

Trademarks and Texas have come a long way since 1888 when the first annual meeting took place. Then, a “brand” in Texas literally meant a symbol seared into the hide of a cow. And justice was meted out by Judge Roy Bean, whose “Law West of the Pecos” entailed more hangings than injunctions for trademark infringement. (We shudder to think of how Judge Bean would have dealt with such devious hombres as counterfeiters and cyber squatters).

And those first INTA attendees back in 1888 would marvel at the range of topics swirling around INTA 2013–social media, fluid trademarks, gtdls, and the “food explosion” and other trendy subjects speak to the complexities and challenges of our brand-centric modern era.

Dallas has been hospitable and impressive. And steeped in history, from the life size sculpture of a long horn cattle drive that speaks to Texas’ Lonesome Dove days to the Texas Book Depository that reminds us of a dark day in November fifty years ago.

Having grown up in Lawrence NJ, I naturally gravitated to the Hotel Lawrence, a venerable establishment that makes up in friendly staff what it lacks in luxury. It’s just a block from Dealey Plaza, and sleeping in the vicinity of JFK’s final ride has conjured up some fitful dreams while rekindling interest in the “single bullet theory” and other conspiracies that seldom haunt my thoughts back home.

Yes, as those Texas troubadours The Flatlanders sing, Dallas is a beautiful sight, and a haunting one too.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Hang ’em first and try ’em later.” Judge Roy Bean.

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