
"According to the lawsuit, Grande and co-defendant companies Agrem BTY LLC and Thunder Road Inc. in 2021 introduced a confusingly similar R.E.M. Beauty mark, also for use in connection with facial beauty products. Using defendant Ariana Grande's considerable reach as an international pop star, defendants have since flooded the market with advertising for their infringing R.E.M. Beauty mark, including to defendant Ariana Grande's hundreds of millions of social media followers, R.E.D. Springs claims in its June suit in Brooklyn federal court."
"In her request to sit it out, Grande's attorney flagged significant concerns for her safety, and said the singer scaled back public appearances after a Nov. 13 incident at the Singapore premiere of Wicked: For Good. While Grande and her co-stars walked the red carpet, Australian influencer Johnson Wen jumped a barricade, rushed at her and threw his arms around her neck."
R.E.D. Springs alleges that Ariana Grande and co-defendants Agrem BTY LLC and Thunder Road Inc. launched a confusingly similar R.E.M. Beauty mark in 2021 for facial beauty products, harming goodwill tied to R.E.D. Springs' R.E.M. Spring facial hair removal device. The Brooklyn federal suit claims defendants used Grande's international reach to flood the market with advertising, targeting her hundreds of millions of social media followers. Grande filed a motion to dismiss and was initially ordered to appear at a Dec. 18 hearing. Her attorney cited safety concerns after a Nov. 13 Singapore red carpet attack, and a judge excused her attendance.
Read at www.amny.com
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