Quote:
Devo looks to whip McDonald's good
Look out. McDonald’s has poked the sleeping bear otherwise known as Devo.
In April, the fast-food chain came out with an “American Idol”-based collection of Happy Meal figurines, each representing a different musical genre: Disco Dave, Country Clay, Rockin' Riley, Soulful Selma and New Wave Nigel.
The little New Wave dude boasts skinny pink shades and something that looks remarkably like Devo’s Energy Dome that band members wore on their heads on the “Freedom of Choice” album cover and in the “Whip It” video. Plus, if you flip up the toy’s right arm, it plays a plastic-y techno groove that, the band’s Club Devo Web site notes, “sounds a bit like a mutated version of Devo’s ‘Doctor Detroit.’ ”
See and hear for yourself by clicking here:
“Was Devo ever contacted by McDonald’s, “American Idol,” or anyone else involved in making and distributing this toy wearing their trademark headgear?” Club Devo asks. “Of course not.”
Because Devo had trademarked those upturned-red-flower-pot-resembling Energy Domes, it is taking legal action.
“We are in the midst of suing them,” Devo bassist Gerald Casale told Australian Associated Press. “This New Wave Nigel doll that they've created is just a complete Devo rip-off, and the red hat is exactly the red hat that I designed, and it’s copyrighted and trademarked. They didn't ask us anything.”
The irony was not lost on Casale that a band that satirized mass culture was now being embraced by two of the biggest fixtures of the mainstream: McDonald’s and “American Idol.”
“We don't like McDonald's, and we don't like ‘American Idol,’ so we're doubly offended.”
The Link that sticks it to the man.
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I thought about putting this in Found on the Web or General Discussion but finally decided on Music.
I find this incredibly funny. Granted I hate hate hate "American Idol" and McDonalds usually makes me mildly nauseous, but this is fantastic. There is a quite obvious trademark infringement here. Unfortunately, I doubt that this case will ever see the inside of a courtroom given that McDonalds has very deep pockets and no fear of litigation, but it would be fantastic if the little guy won.
The main point, though, is getting this story seen by more people, especially nonsubscribers of the Tribune.