Supreme Court Sides With Jack Daniel's Against Doggy Chew Toy Company
It's not a broad attack on free expression, but Thursday's ruling is certainly a victory for brands that can't take a joke.

In a case involving poop jokes on dog chew toys shaped like liquor bottles—yes, really—the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the First Amendment does not broadly protect parody products from violating U.S. copyright laws.
In a unanimous ruling for Tennessee-based Jack Daniel's, the justices determined that lower courts had erred by rejecting the whiskey maker's claim that a brand of parody chew toys violated the brand's copyright protections. Those chew toys, manufactured by VIP Products, roughly copied the iconic shape of a Jack Daniel's bottle and parodied the brand's label—replacing the famous "Old No. 7 Tennessee Whiskey" signage with a joke about "The Old No. 2 on your Tennessee Carpet."
In its petition, Jack Daniel's claimed the VIP Products' "Bad Spaniels" chew toy both infringed and diluted the Jack Daniel's brand. Both would be violations of the Lanham Act, the federal law governing copyrights. A federal district court sided with the whiskey brand. However, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that ruling by pointing to the fact that courts have long recognized a First Amendment right to parody commercial products in artistic expression—the so-called "Rogers test," which is derived from a 1989 Supreme Court case involving performer Ginger Rogers.
In Thursday's ruling, Justice Elena Kagan said those precedents do not apply to the "Bad Spaniels" chew toy case.
The Rogers test applies to artistic works that "have an 'expressive element' implicating 'First Amendment values' and carry only a 'slight risk' of confusing consumers about the 'source or content' of the underlying work," Kagan wrote. Trademarks are allowed to be used for "expressive functions" but not as a stand-in for a trademark itself, she added. That's why the name "Barbie" can be used in song lyrics—something that courts actually had to decide in the wake of the 1997 Europop hit song "Barbie Girl."
"Consumer confusion about source—trademark law's cardinal sin—is most likely to arise when someone uses another's trademark as a trademark," Kagan concluded. "In such cases, Rogers has no proper application."
This is, ultimately, a narrow ruling that Kagan explicitly says should not be construed as a review of the merits of the Rogers test. Even in that narrow sense, however, it should raise an eyebrow. The idea that consumers would be meaningfully misled by this parody product—one that is fairly obviously a dog toy and not a bottle of liquor—stains credulity even if fits within the confines of copyright law. So does the determination that VIP Products wasn't engaging in artistic expression. Even bad jokes are deserving of First Amendment protection.
The case will be re-heard by the 9th Circuit—but this time without VIP Products being able to lean on the Rogers test as a defense.
In all, Thursday's ruling is not a major blow to free expression or the right to sell parody products. But it is certainly a victory for brands that can't take a joke.
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Oh, yeah; the first thing I think of when I see a joke dog chew is getting a drink of whiskey.
I'm thinking anyone who can't tell a dog toy from a bottle of whiskey has probably had way too much whiskey already.
Googled “Pepsi chew toy” and this came up
https://www.lovemyhound.com/products/fuzzyard-pupsi-soda-dog-toy
Got more with “Coke chew toy.”
Are these next?
Edit: They don’t have a unique can shape. What about Red Bull?
https://www.chewy.com/ethical-pet-fun-drink-red-ball-dog/dp/304925
No picture of the chew toy in question?
Inexcusable
Here you go.
Really unbelievable stuff. I wonder how many vacations five justices had to take on Jack Daniels' dime to make this ruling pop out.
Meh.
Music as similar as the logos would almost certainly result in a ruling of infringement.
Which is also bullshit.
They rejected an Alabama congressional district map drawn by an algorithm as racist because it didn’t deliver enough majority black districts
Skin color is the most important thing
Consumer confusion about source—trademark law's cardinal sin—is most likely to arise when someone uses another's trademark as a trademark,
Well I know I have no intention of drinking any more of that Jack Daniels stuff unless they come up with a new product line of dog chew toys and plastic vomit.
>>Justice Elena Kagan said those precedents do not apply to the "Bad Spaniels" chew toy case.
full. retard.
The other 8 went along with it. 9 full retards with no sense of humor.
exactly. wtf Clarence?
Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf and Not The Bee actually give the rational, and it is correct, below (and I say this as one of those utterly-insane anti-IP libertarians [who would take his name off of the patents they're on if he could]).
You can absolutely parody someone else's trademark for free. You can even do it for profit. What you cannot do is trademark something sufficiently close to someone else's trademark and say "Oh, it's a parody." Begging the question: What's "sufficiently close"? Begging the answer: The criteria on which the lower court *can* base their decision.
You can say the parody is so obvious that no one would confuse it for the real trademark, but you can't say a trademark can't be enforced because of parody.
It can be pretty directly mapped to The Rule Of Goats. If you take your pants off and apply your genitals to the backside of a goat, actual penetration isn't required to deem you a goatfucker. If you just stand a few feet behind a goat with your pants on and make a hip thrusting motion, you aren't a goatfucker. The court can't say one or the other is OK because it's parody.
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Jack Daniels sucks. Has a burned taste. I prefer Makers Mark.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
It's not a broad attack on free expression, but Thursday's ruling is certainly a victory for brands that can't take a joke
How is Eric the economics writer? By trademark law companies have to fight every infringement or risk losing their trademark. It isnt about a fucking joke.
I call foul
It's a sad day when Not The Bee does a better job than Reason.
Major legal distinction there, even if it's still a stupid distinction.
It’s a sad day when Not The Bee does a better job than Reason.
Or just a day that ends in ‘y’. Between the way they methodically confuse or conflate two similar ideas described by the same word, report half a story as though it were the full story, or report plainly wrong facts and opinions, Reason should be “The Earnest Babylon Bee”.
It would be interesting to create another product parody, called "Brandon Spaniels #2, using an also-similar label, but with Biden's face in it, then see if Bad Spaniels sues you.
Who did the Bad Spaniels people file their complaint against?
Good for the Court. Intellectual Property is just that - property. Causing harm against my hard-earned IP is no different than causing harm against my physical property.
The dog toy company caused harm against Jack Daniels' IP and should be made to cease and desist.
As long as the attorneys get paid it's all good.
No, it's a legal fiction. Perhaps one with good effects, but still not the same as real property. If it was, we wouldn't need a different term for it.
I'm pretty sure if I made a line of NFL quarterback chew toys - I would be sued. How about a line of Disney character sex toys?
Disney probably already has them
It is Pride month...
When California or Florida legalizes prostitution maybe they will open a Disney brothel where you can have sex with a character and/or dressed as a character.
That's actually a terrible not terrible idea
*unzips*
But if you made a parody of NFL and didn't use the actual NFL logo but a modified joke version you should win that suit. Unless you tried to trademark your parody of the NFL.
Maybe The liquor connection sold more dog toys and the dog toys sold more liquor --- but hell who studies Economics any more.
Why do car dealers all land on the car block if it hurts every one of them?? Really, why ???
Jack Daniels is one of my favorite whiskeys, along with Oban, Makers Mark, and Bowmore.
I guess I can forgive them for having no sense of humor. But, damn..
Barbie Girl is a eurodance song. Same genre as What is Love and Rhythm is a Dancer
So, the first indicator that our article author, Eric Boehm, is utterly ignorant of the actual issues in this case is his repeated use of the word "copyright" in a pure trademark case.
That is a level of confusion equivalent to talking about right fielder Aaron Judge throwing a touchdown in a Yankees game.
Not that having no fucking idea what he's talking about stops Mr. Boehm from telling us that the Supreme Court claimed that there was likely confusion.
The Supreme Court, of course, did not. Rather, it said the proper standard for judgment, given that "Bad Spaniel" was itself being used as a trademark, was ordinary likelihood of confusion between trademarks, rather than the special Rodgers test, and remanded the case back to the lower courts for trial under that standard.
Insofar as there's low likelihood of consumer confusion, the lower courts should predictably conclude that there isn't, in fact, a trademark infringement.
Why are we all able to see these things, yet the person paid to write about them doesn't?
And it's in the very fist line of the ruling.
This was the only possible outcome.
Were it not for Jack Daniel’s, this dog toy would not have a market.
That's true of any parody, isn't it?
Nobody’s going to be confused that a doggie chew toy is a bottle of liquor, but liquor-bottle-shaped dog toys would be a conceivable line extension for Jack Daniels, so they should have the rights to it.
I do wonder, though, about Revell scale models of equipment. Wacky Ads I don't think are a problem, because they're clearly funny ads rather than direct parodies of the products themselves.
Maybe The liquor connection sold more dog toys and the dog toys sold more liquor --- but hell who studies Economics any more.
Why do car dealers all land on the car block if it hurts every one of them?? Really, why ???
Now it will sell like free money.
SCOTUS is wrong wrong wrong. Where is their any connection that a sane adult couldn't see through. WIll it hurt whiskey sales, will dogs feel like copyright infringers, will creative people make Stephen Pinker hair shampoo....why is this even an issue when the stupidest man ever to inhabit high office still lives
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