Like everyone else, I had strong feelings about the Supreme Courtâs controversial decision regarding abortion, even though there was no way it would ever affect my body directly, for reasons too obvious to mention. But the Supremes are currently mulling over a decision that could strike to the very heart of my identity.
I refer, of course, to the suit filed by the Jack Danielâs Whiskey company against an Arizona company named VIP Products, which makes doggy chew toys.
The toy at the heart of the case is a rubber squeak toy shaped and decorated like a Jack Danielâs Tennessee Whiskey bottle. The toy, named Bad Spaniels, sports âdoggy poop humorâ all over it. For example, while the original bottle has the words âOld No. 7 brandâ and âTennessee Sour Mash Whiskeyâ on it, the toy has the words âThe Old No. 2 on Your Tennessee Carpet.â
The Jack Danielâs bottle notes that it is â40% alcohol by volume,â while the chew toy says itâs â43% Poo by Vol.â and â100% Smelly.â
VIP Products argues that itâs just pun-filled parodyâbad jokes about good whiskeyâand that Jack Danielâs has no sense of humor. Jack Danielâs lawyers argue that the âprofit-motivated âjokeâ confuses consumers by taking advantage of Jack Danielâs hard-earned goodwill.â
Other companies are watching the outcome of this case as well, because VIP Products cranks out other parody products for dogs to chew, like Mountain Drool, which mimics Mountain Dew, and Heini Sniffân, shaped like a Heineken bottle. Even Budweiser will be watching closely to see the fate of VIPâs Butt Wiper toy.
In a similar 2007 case, Louis Vuitton sued a chew toy manufacturer, Nevada-based Haute Diggety Dog, for selling a dog toy called Chewy Vuiton. A federal appeals court ruled in favor of free speech and bad doggy humor, and the luxury bag maker chose not to appeal.
But this current doggy toy case before the Supremes has me worried, not because I have a dog Iâd like to give the toy to (I donât), and not because I drink Jack Danielâs (I donât).
I am worried because my very identity is at stake with their ruling.
If youâll look at the top of this page, youâll see that my column is called âThe view from Planet Kerth.â The more insightful of you may recognize that âPlanet Kerthâ sounds an awful lot like âPlanet Earth.â
And if the Jack Danielâs Whiskey company wins their case and the Supreme Court quashes the rights of a chew-toy company to make bad poop-themed parody jokes based on their name, what might happen to me if Planet Earth decides to whip my asteroid with a lawsuit? What chance would my lawyers have to win a court case against an entire planet?
I guess I can take some solace in the knowledge that no other planets have ever filed suit against companies here for appropriating their names. Mars candies still end up in Halloween baskets, and Mercury outboard motors still keep boats on an even keel. No court cases have stripped Venus apparel from womenâs bodiesâalthough Iâd like to be there if it ever happens.
Still, those planets are all pretty far away. Iâm not sure if theyâve even gotten the news that Earth companies are raking in the cash under their names.
But my Planet Kerth columns are published right here on Planet Earth, so how could the planet not take notice? And because the Internet makes my writing accessible to eight billion humans all over the planet, my name might be on the lips of literally dozens of readers. How could the planet miss what Iâve been doing? After all, every time we squirt out a bit more carbon into the atmosphere, Earth lets us know sheâs watching us by sending another hurricane, blizzard, droughtâŚ.
So Iâm sure sheâs watching the Supreme Courtâs decision as closely as I am. Who will win: a deep-pocketed best-selling whiskey giant, or a tiny mom-and-pop gadget company? If you want a hint of which way the Republican-heavy court might rule, consider the fact that three of the top five individual donors to Mitch McConnellâs campaign funds have ties to Jack Danielâs.
Then again, this might work the other way around, right? I mean, when it comes to Planet Earth vs. Planet Kerth, who actually owns the brand?
Has Planet Earth ever staked a claim to own the name? Sure, we all refer to her by that name, but has the planet itself ever used that name to refer to herself? It seems to me that sheâs been awfully quiet about it for the past four-and-a-half billion years. To my knowledge, she hasnât uttered a peep to claim ownership of the name Earthâor any other name, for that matter.
My column, on the other hand, has proudly worn the name Planet Kerth for close to fifteen years, and I have clippings to prove it. I have been there like an old dog, as regular as clockwork, dropping gems on the grass next to your driveway for you to pick upâan apt doggy-poop metaphor, some readers would say, considering the quality of my writing.
So Iâll be watching this Jack Danielâs case closely. And if the whiskey company wins its suit, and if it quashes VIP Products from creating any product that even remotely hints at its name, I will immediately bring an unlawful parody suit against Planet Earth for using a name that sounds so close to mine.
Itâs a move straight out of Donald Trumpâs playbook: Double down and attack, even whenâespecially whenâyou know youâre dead wrong. And how could Trumpâs Supreme Court disagree?
So stay tuned, my dozen or so faithful Kerthlings. Lively times await!
TR Kerth is the author of the book âRevenge of the Sardines.â Contact him at trkerth@yahoo.com.