Jay-Z and Beyonce lose bid to Trademark 'Blue Ivy'
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Entertainment
By Dan Hyman, RollingStone.com
Entertainment
By Dan Hyman, RollingStone.com
Jay-Z, right, and wife
Beyonce celebrate at a New Jersey Nets game February 20, 2012 in New York City.
Jayz and Beyonce can't trademark the name of their daughter, Blue
Ivy, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has ruled, which means the Boston
wedding planner Blue Ivy can continue to use the name.
The
superstar couple filed a petition to
trademark the name "Blue Ivy" shortly after their daughter was born
in January, seeking to reserve it for use as a possible brand name for a line
of baby-related products, including carriages, diaper bags and baby cosmetics.
Veronica
Alexandra, who started Blue Ivy in 2009, filed her own petition to trademark
the name, and the Patent Office ruling means she can use "Blue Ivy"
for event and wedding planning and related marketing and advertising. Jay-Z and
Beyoncé can use the name for other potential business endeavours.
"I
knew this was going to be a bittersweet roller coaster," Alexandra, 32,
tells Rolling Stone. "If this wasn't going to work, I'd go after both of
them. Like, 'Let's do it!' In my mind I had some protective rights.
There's no
way by way of being a celebrity they should have entitlement [to the name].
Shame on them."
Alexandra
was initially surprised to learn the famous couple had given their child the
same name as her company. "I was really blatantly shocked," she says.
"I didn't think it was true because nobody names their daughter Blue
Ivy."
Still,
Alexandra, who named the company to convey romantic traditionalism, says the
trademark dispute has been a blessing in disguise. "For me it was a very
large compliment," she says. "All in all I was extremely happy that
my design capacity is pretty badass."
The
entrepreneur's main takeaway? "Money doesn't buy everything."
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