Costume Manufacturer Alleges Competitor's Banana Suit Costume Looks a Little Too Much Like a Banana, Is Copyright Violation
Rasta Imposta has a history of defending its "unique" banana costume design with copyright litigation.

If you think copyright law in this country is governed by reason, an absolutely bananas federal court case should disabuse you of that notion.
Currently, costume manufacturer Rasta Imposta—inventors of the famed Rastafarian hat with sewn-in dreadlocks—is suing fellow costume maker Kangaroo Manufacturing, arguing that Kangaroo's banana suit costume is so similar to Rasta's that it amounts to a copyright violation.
"Kangaroo's conduct in copying Rasta Imposta's well-known Banana Design is likely to cause consumer confusion as to the source of the products offered by Kangaroo," writes the company in its lawsuit, arguing that should Kangaroo create "an inferior banana costume design, consumers are likely to incorrectly associate that product with Rasta Imposta."
Rasta first filed its lawsuit in October 2017, and the case has been winding its way through federal courts ever since.
Throughout, Kangaroo has argued that a banana costume is going to look like, well, a banana and that because bananas appear in nature, simple costume replicas of the fruit can't be copyrighted. "It was designed to look like a banana, and it looks like a banana," said a lawyer for Kangaroo in an April 2019 court hearing.
Back in May 2018, U.S. District Court Judge Noel Hillman rejected this argument, saying that while all bananas might look alike, all banana costumes need not.
"The shape and curvature can vary, as can the existence and color of tips to the banana. Bananas can also be designed to appear ripe, overripe, or unripe, ranging in color from yellow, to brown, to green. The shape can be long or more stout, relatively elongated or thin or more plump. The banana may be whole or partially peeled. There can also be the production of vertical lines and the texture and material can differ," wrote Hillman.
Kangaroo's lawyers appealed Hillman's ruling to the Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, where the case now sits.
Rasta's lawsuit against Kangaroo over alleged infringement of its banana costume design is not its first. Since copyrighting the costume in 2010, the company has filed three other lawsuits alleging infringement of its banana design, including one in 2017 against retail giant K-Mart.
The fact that Rasta has had to resort to lawsuits so frequently to protect its copyright and that all three of its past lawsuits were settled quickly out of court suggests that there's something to Kangaroo's contention that one banana costume is much like another.
Libertarians are often split on whether the government should have strict protections for copyrights and other forms of intellectual property. There are good arguments on both sides.
Nevertheless, it's a slippery slope from agreeing that there should be some IP protections for people's commercial creations to ending up with two companies quibbling in federal court about how similar their man-sized banana suits can be.
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Ron Jeremy : That gives me an idea.
I’m sure there are fine people on both sides.
>>>while all bananas might look alike, all banana costumes need not.
US District Court Judge Noel Hillman is an idiot.
Rasta's case is so bananas that it'll probably end with a Kangaroo trial.
WARNING - references to "Hollaback Girl" by No Doubt will be considered Godwinning within the context of this thread.
You know who else made references to "Hollaback Girl"?
Lizzie Warren?
The shape can be long or more stout, relatively elongated or thin or more plump.
Hawt.
should Kangaroo create "an inferior banana costume design, consumers are likely to incorrectly associate that product with Rasta Imposta.
You know who else had an inferior banana?
Probably Maduro.
the Bush guy who's not married to the Hollaback Girl anymore
Jon Snow?
because bananas appear in nature
Not in 12 years you heartless monsters!!
"The shape and curvature can vary, as can the existence and color of tips to the banana. Bananas can also be designed to appear ripe, overripe, or unripe, ranging in color from yellow, to brown, to green. The shape can be long or more stout, relatively elongated or thin or more plump. The banana may be whole or partially peeled. There can also be the production of vertical lines and the texture and material can differ,"
This guy's cruised more parks than Tony.
Nevertheless, it's a slippery slope...
Such tawdry puns for an article about bananas.
They are very appeeling.
I must appeal to your sensibilities and make some awful puns, but this kind of court case is bananas!
Screw you, Unicorn Abattoir. This shit is bananas. B A N A N A S!
I must admit that song has a peel.
I'd keep posting puns, but I'm afraid I'll slip up.
Don't let us stem your addiction.
Rock/Doo-wop group for sheep: Baa Na Na.
Rasta Imposta clearly has an anti-competitive monopoly on banana costumes, and should be broken up under the Sherman Act. They really slipped up this time.
If you keep up with the banana puns, I'm going to split.
But the Kangaroo company doesn't want to play second banana.
Kangaroo's costume banana
Hide the deadly black tarantula
Daylight come and me wan go home
Semi-obligatory: The Banana Boat Song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Tou8-Cz8is
Beat you by a minute Eddy!
Oops, UA beat me to it
I have a friend that sings in a Doors tribute band. He told me a guy in another Doors tribute band was complaining to him that he was ripping off the other guy's moves.
Sounds like someone's brain is squirming like a toad.
One Doors tribute band starts mouthing off about another tribute band and next thing you know -
There's blood in the streets up to my ankles...
five to one, baby.
Sometimes a banana is just a banana. Other times it's a plantain.
- Sigmund Freud
It sounds like it's going to be a cruel summer for one of these litigants.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9ml3nyww80
I miss the '80s
This one's for you, Eddy!
IP laws just need to die. We'll all be better off that way. Well, patent trolls, the RIAA and other hard-lobbying industry leaders won't be better off, but everyone else will.
It's cases like this as well as Tim Pool vs Studio FOW that reminds me the current Civil Court System is a Joke...
And that makes me a Sad Panda
One has to wonder if the banana suit business is that lucrative that it spawns multiple IP lawsuits... It if those companies have lawyers on staff with literally nothing to do most days.
Just the opposite:
1. Design and sell/rent Banana costume
2. no/tiny profit
3. Sue everyone else selling/renting banana costumes for copyright violations.
4 $$$$
The real danger of realistic banana costumes is not copyright violations, but attacks by hungry chimps!