Boogity, boogity, boogity, let's file a lawsuit', boys

dpkimmel2001

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Nice Darrell, real nice.....

Memorabilia store in Canada forced to change name: A New Brunswick businessman and long-time racing fan has been forced to change the name of his tiny memorabilia shop under the threat of a lawsuit by NASCAR legend Darrell Waltrip. Randy Nicholson, who has sold NASCAR merchandise in Woodstock since 2001, has been accused of infringing on a trademark that wasn't registered by Waltrip until four years after Nicholson's store was established. Borrowing from a catchphrase issued by the Fox Sports commentator at the start of every race, Nicholson initially called his business Boogity Boogity Racing, and then later changed the name to Boogity Sportswear. On Friday, he received a cease-and-desist letter from an Ontario law firm representing Waltrip, a former Winston Cup champion who says, "Boogity, boogity, boogity, let's go racin', boys" each time the green flag drops. Waltrip registered the catch phrase as a trademark in Canada on Oct. 31, 2005. "My first instinct was that I was going to fight (him), but I don't have the means,'' Nicholson said Tuesday as he stood behind the counter in his store, which also sells hockey, wrestling and ultimate fighting souvenirs. "I am in no position to fight Darrell Waltrip. He has deeper pockets than I do." Nicholson said he registered his business with the federal government in 2001, and paid more than $1,200 to cover the cost of a search that was conducted to ensure the name wasn't being used in Canada by anyone else. At one point, he also operated stores under the Boogity banner in Moncton and Saint John, but he never received a complaint until last week, when a sheriff delivered a letter from MBM, an intellectual property legal group in Ottawa, sent on Waltrip's behalf. "From a trademark point of view, he is infringing Darrell Waltrip's registered Canadian trademark,'' Scott Miller, the head of the litigation group at MBM, said Tuesday. "Taking intellectual property without permission is as reprehensible as taking anything else." Nicholson argues that he has never infringed on Waltrip's rights. He says he has never sold anything that carried Waltrip's trademark, and the few Boogity-related items he sold bore a logo that he developed on his own. Nicholson has until next Tuesday to wipe his shop clean of the word "boogity" and has already taken down his signs. Until he comes up with something better, he will call his business R&B Embroidery, to accentuate the fact that he does printing and embroidery and manufactures vinyl signs. Nicholson said it will cost him between $5,000 and $8,000 to register a new name, put up signs, change his business cards and letterhead, order new cheques, change the way his phone is listed, and set up a new website.
 
This doesn't surprise me at all. About 16 years ago, there was a bunch of us online friends who started what we called, the NASCAR Gang. This was before any of us used the internet, it was Prodigy back then. Prodigy was king of the online services at that time though Compuserve was right behind, but much costlier. When AOL bought Compuserve, the competition began for users and Prodigy began to raise their prices. Our group then decided it was time to find another venue and we did, but some weren't able to find something and we decided that to stay together, we would produce a newsletter and send it snail mail to everyone who would send a SASE to the editor. We called this silly little newsletter The NASCAR Gang Rag. Everything went find until one day we got a letter from NASCAR lawyers giving us a cease-and-desist order from using that name. Well of course we stopped using it and it wasn't long before we stopped the newsletter all together. This silly little newsletter as I have always called it, had a subscription of a whopping 20 people at the most. No one made any money from this publication and in fact, it cost us who put it together money. This sort of thing isn't unusual and big corporations have filed suits with many small time business people including children. It's crap, but what can we do about it?
 
Who the he11 would want Boogity cr@p for their store name anyway.......Screw DW.. I hate that squeaky whiny voice anyways
 
BOO.
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If he'd been using it for 4 years before DW trademarked it I'm think he might possible fight and win,,,if he had the funds.

Really low of DW, really low.
 
If he'd been using it for 4 years before DW trademarked it I'm think he might possible fight and win,,,if he had the funds.

Really low of DW, really low.
Not unless he trademarked the slogan. But even then, I remember a case where a small child did register a slogan only to have her forced to stop using it years later. Can't remember what huge corporation did it, but I do remember the case. Huge corporations can outspend most of us with just one hearing.
 
Not unless he trademarked the slogan. But even then, I remember a case where a small child did register a slogan only to have her forced to stop using it years later. Can't remember what huge corporation did it, but I do remember the case. Huge corporations can outspend most of us with just one hearing.

I think it was a child that come out with a basketball game and later mcdonalds sueed them because of the name. I forgot what it was called.
 
When I was in College, we had to do a case-study on lawsuits over copyrighted names.

My memory is a little fuzzy, but the study we were looking basicly how McDonald's sued a pub owner in Ireland because his pub shared the same name as their fast food chain.

I think the end result was that despite being named after himself, the owner had to change the name of the pub to something else. The fast food McDonald's was closed less than a year later because the locals were so upset over the lawsuit that they stopped going there.
 
I don't see how they can make him change the name. It was named that before DW used his stupid slogan.

I would take it to court and if he wanted the name he could pay me to stop using it.

How is this even a case?

BTW DW and digger can go screw themselves.
 
I don't see how they can make him change the name. It was named that before DW used his stupid slogan.

I would take it to court and if he wanted the name he could pay me to stop using it.

How is this even a case?

BTW DW and digger can go screw themselves.

I was wondering the same thing.
 
From an article from Cupscene.com --- sheds a little light


Waltrip’s longtime business manager however, took issue with Nicholson’s claims.

“It’s unfortunate to read the articles about Mr. Nicholson’s store, as they do not tell the whole story”, said Van Colley in a statement. “The truth is DW first came up with Boogity Boogity Boogity and then the name of the store appeared.

“Mr. Nicholson only used Boogity as a result of DW’s earlier use on FOX. In my opinion, it is not a coincidence that DW started his broadcasts with Boogity, Boogity, Boogity in March of 2002 and then 9 months later, with his business partner, Richard Poulin, that Mr. Nicholson incorporated a company called BOOGIDDY BOOGIDDY RACING INC on November 6, 2002. He then changed the corporate name to Boogity Boogity Boogity Racing Inc on March 3, 2003. That company was dissolved on July 25, 2008. Then the store operated under the name Boogity Sportswear.

The shop went as far as applying for DW’s trademark of Boogity, Boogity Boogity which was rejected in late 2007 by the Canadian Trademark Office.”


According to records, Waltrip registered the catch phrase as a trademark in Canada on Oct. 31, 2005.
 
From an article from Cupscene.com --- sheds a little light


Waltrip’s longtime business manager however, took issue with Nicholson’s claims.

“It’s unfortunate to read the articles about Mr. Nicholson’s store, as they do not tell the whole story”, said Van Colley in a statement. “The truth is DW first came up with Boogity Boogity Boogity and then the name of the store appeared.

“Mr. Nicholson only used Boogity as a result of DW’s earlier use on FOX. In my opinion, it is not a coincidence that DW started his broadcasts with Boogity, Boogity, Boogity in March of 2002 and then 9 months later, with his business partner, Richard Poulin, that Mr. Nicholson incorporated a company called BOOGIDDY BOOGIDDY RACING INC on November 6, 2002. He then changed the corporate name to Boogity Boogity Boogity Racing Inc on March 3, 2003. That company was dissolved on July 25, 2008. Then the store operated under the name Boogity Sportswear.

The shop went as far as applying for DW’s trademark of Boogity, Boogity Boogity which was rejected in late 2007 by the Canadian Trademark Office.”


According to records, Waltrip registered the catch phrase as a trademark in Canada on Oct. 31, 2005.

I don't see how this changes much. Darrell still looks like a complete ass for suing this guy over something so trivial. In some ways, it is kind of like when Nike siezed the video from one of their camps because a college kid dunked on LeBron James. They were trying to protect their star's image. But, they ended up making it a much bigger deal by siezing the tapes. I think that DW is making this a big story when he could have just let the whole thing go. How was this guy's store name hurting big bad Darrell in a significant way?

There's an old saying that applies here "Just because you can, doesn't mean you should".
 
From an article from Cupscene.com --- sheds a little light


Waltrip’s longtime business manager however, took issue with Nicholson’s claims.

“It’s unfortunate to read the articles about Mr. Nicholson’s store, as they do not tell the whole story”, said Van Colley in a statement. “The truth is DW first came up with Boogity Boogity Boogity and then the name of the store appeared.

“Mr. Nicholson only used Boogity as a result of DW’s earlier use on FOX. In my opinion, it is not a coincidence that DW started his broadcasts with Boogity, Boogity, Boogity in March of 2002 and then 9 months later, with his business partner, Richard Poulin, that Mr. Nicholson incorporated a company called BOOGIDDY BOOGIDDY RACING INC on November 6, 2002. He then changed the corporate name to Boogity Boogity Boogity Racing Inc on March 3, 2003. That company was dissolved on July 25, 2008. Then the store operated under the name Boogity Sportswear.

The shop went as far as applying for DW’s trademark of Boogity, Boogity Boogity which was rejected in late 2007 by the Canadian Trademark Office.”


According to records, Waltrip registered the catch phrase as a trademark in Canada on Oct. 31, 2005.

Thanks, TRL. :)
 
Darrell may look like an ass for a trivial lawsuit but I think the store owner looks like a bigger ass for picking such a stupid name for his store in the first place. :rolleyes:
 
Darrel doesn't have a store that is called "Boogity" anything and he stopped someone who named a store that because he copywrited (through his use on the broadcasts) the phrase in 2002? Darrell might better watch out because the phrase "boogity boogity boogity" is part of the lyrics of a song about a poker playing monkey by the Coasters (Charlie Brown, Along Came Jones, Yakity Yak and others) that was copywrited in the fifties and is still being performed by them in rock and roll revival shows. :sarcasm:
 
Darrel doesn't have a store that is called "Boogity" anything and he stopped someone who named a store that because he copywrited (through his use on the broadcasts) the phrase in 2002? Darrell might better watch out because the phrase "boogity boogity boogity" is part of the lyrics of a song about a poker playing monkey by the Coasters (Charlie Brown, Along Came Jones, Yakity Yak and others) that was copywrited in the fifties and is still being performed by them in rock and roll revival shows. :sarcasm:

Or Barry Mann's "Who Put The Bomp"


Who put the bomp
In the bomp bah bomp bah bomp?
Who put the ram
In the rama lama ding dong?
Who put the bop
In the bop shoo bop shoo bop?
Who put the dip
In the dip da dip da dip?
Who was that man?
I'd like to shake his hand
He made my baby
Fall in love with me (yeah!!)

When my baby heard
"Bomp bah bah bomp "
"Bah bomp bah bomp bah bomp bomp"
Every word went right into her heart
And when she heard them singin'
"Rama lama lama lama"
"Rama ding dong"
She said we'd never have to part
So

Who put the bomp
In the bomp bah bomp bah bomp?
Who put the ram
In the rama lama ding dong?
Who put the bop
In the bop shoo bop shoo bop?
Who put the dip
In the dip da dip da dip?
Who was that man?
I'd like to shake his hand
He made my baby
Fall in love with me (yeah!!)


Each time that we're alone
Boogity boogity boogity
Boogity boogity boogity shoo
Sets my baby's heart all aglow
And everytime we dance to
Dip da dip da dip
Dip da dip da dip
She always says she loves me so
So

Who put the bomp
In the bomp bah bomp bah bomp?
Who put the ram
In the rama lama ding dong?
Who put the bop
In the bop shoo bop shoo bop?
Who put the dip
In the dip da dip da dip?
Who was that man?
I'd like to shake his hand
He made my baby
Fall in love with me (yeah!!)
 
Ray Stevens even had a whole album called "Boogity Boogity" because his hit song "The Streak" had "Boogity Boogity" in the chorus.

It kind of seems like Darrell might be opening up a can of worms here. I kind of think it would be funny if he did end up getting sued for copywriting someone else's ideas and words. That would seem like poetic justice to me.
 
Right on

Ray Stevens even had a whole album called "Boogity Boogity" because his hit song "The Streak" had "Boogity Boogity" in the chorus.

It kind of seems like Darrell might be opening up a can of worms here. I kind of think it would be funny if he did end up getting sued for copywriting someone else's ideas and words. That would seem like poetic justice to me.

You are dead right,hope it turns around to bite him on the ***e.
It sounds so contrived everytime he says it,not a lover of it!!:beerbang:
 
Im headin out in a bit to copyright lol, lmao, omg, and a bunch of other phrases, cause after all I said them years ago.....lol..... then everybody can pay me a nickel for the rights to use them.......
geeeeeeeze....... is this what the world has come to??? I can see if he was namin his store DW's Favorites, or some such...... but come on...... it's a friggin phrase...... oh well.
on a side note...... anybody have the number to Speilberg???? Maybe he can drop a few lawsuits on DW...... I mean after all, didn't they call him "Jaws".....lol
 
Don't forget in 1957 Quincy Jones recorded Boogity, boogity (off to the races) and it is copyrighted. I can't find the lyrics tho.
 
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