Quote:
Originally Posted by Batsu
I don't see where the paint chip-eating "charge" comes from. WWFund, who could have taken action earlier, used the gay "scratch logo" as a basis for another suit after the agreement ran out (which really, the "scratch logo" didn't really violate)...as an excuse to take advantage of WWE's supposed "market confusion" (which even most non-wrestling fans would agree, that confusing the two would be like confusing the BBC (UK TV network) with a non-sequitur Bobby's Barbeque Company (abbreviated to BBC)). They also sued after winning the injunction, to recover supposed "damages" from said confusion, but tried to get a multi-million dollar settlement; this from a non-profit org with good intentions? Opportunism at its finest. It's largely reminiscent of WWE Legal's ..... crap. That's what makes it funny.
As for the PTC, it's largely the same shit. Though there were no suits between PTC and WWE, PTC only seemed to find an excuse to levy their idiocy on WWE when WWE was the "hot shit" on TV. Now that WWE has moved further away from that status, PTC couldn't care very much. If WWE ever gets back to its 1998-2001 "run" on TV, yanking all this advertising money for whatever station it's on, maybe the PTC will find the time to "rate" them again.
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The World Wildlife Fund had a potential suit in the 80s in which they came up with a good-faith agreement between them and then-World Wrestling Federation.
Paint Chip Point #1: They had an established agreement.
The WWF could have sued at any time, yes, but had no reason to.
Of course, come to the Attitude Era, and WWE was becoming more shocking, and The WWF felt that their good-faith agreement was being shat upon. Before suing, WWF tried to work it out with them.
Paint Chip Point #2: There was a bona fide attempt at resolution.
Further, Vince McMahon
offered them money to change their name. They declined.
Paint Chip Point #3: It wasn't about the money.
WWE was only hit for "damages"after refusal to comply, fuckwit. Every step of the way, this was because of Vince's ego and drive to drop an F-U on the other guy. This wasn't opportunism, it's not comparable, and you are posting totally misinformed on the nature of this, like so many of the fucktards who just go ZOMG THE PANDAS ARE GREEDY! And went with what they had heard from some other paint-eating knuckle-scraper.
Hell, let's apply Occam's Razor. If this was about money, why did WWF not sue during the Hulkamania Era? Why enter into a good faith agreement instead?
Oh, wait, they wouldn't. That makes no sense at all, especially when they could have made money off some sort of real financial arrangement.
They would be comparable if:
- Vince hadn't violated good faith
- Vince hadn't refused to try and deal until after the suits were in progress
- Vince hadn't refused to comply initially (And then continued not to comply in other countries)
Buuuuut, sadly, there was no opportunism here. Retribution, perhaps, but your argument requires a total abscence of the real matters of the case.