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Marley heirs wage global war on trademark pirates

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  • Marley heirs wage global war on trademark pirates

    Marley heirs wage global war on trademark pirates
    By DAVID McFADDEN, Associated Press Writer David Mcfadden, Associated Press Writer 19 mins ago

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – Coming to a store near you: Bob Marley video games, shoes ... snowboards?

    Heirs of the Jamaican reggae legend are plunging into the global trademark wars, seeking to enforce their exclusive rights to an image that has grown steadily in scope and appeal since the Jamaican superstar died of brain cancer in 1981 at age 36.

    The Marley name, look and sound are estimated to generate an estimated $600 million a year in sales of unlicensed wares. Legal sales are much smaller — just $4 million for his descendants in 2007, according to Forbes magazine. The Marleys refuse to give a figure.

    Now the family has hired Toronto-based Hilco Consumer Capital to protect their rights to the brand. Hilco CEO Jamie Salter believes Marley products could be a $1 billion business in a few years.

    "The family managed all the rights before Hilco was brought on board," said Marley's fourth son, Rohan. "We didn't have a real good grasp on the international scope prior to Hilco, nor the proper management."

    The turn to big business has stirred some grousing from die-hard fans in Internet chat rooms, who say it goes against the grain of a singer who preached nonmaterialism and popularized the Rastafarian credo of oneness with nature and marijuana consumption as a sacrament.

    But Lorna Wainwright, who manages a Kingston studio and music shop called Tuff Gong, Marley's nickname during his slum boyhood in a nearby slum, backed the move, saying "the world needs the Bob Marley police."

    "It's a free-for-all out there with all the fakes, all the piracy," she said. "It's important to continue getting his real message out like when he was alive because the world is in a crisis and Bob Marley's lyrics provide a solution."

    A representative of the Bobo Ashanti order, a Rastafarian group, also expressed support.

    "Bob Marley was and still is a stepping stone for many around the world who seek Rastafari roots and culture," said the Rasta rep who identified himself as the Honorable Prophet Moambeh Acosta in an e-mail. "We can only hope and pray for the (family's) success ... as the task seems insurmountable due to the years of piracy and counterfeiting."

    Rather than focusing on street vendors, who hawk everything from Bob Marley T-shirts to beach towels, the partnership is creating a new line of products dubbed "House of Marley" and will police the trademark vigilantly.

    "You're never going to stop the guys in the streets, flea markets ... but you try as much as you can," said Salter.

    Snowboards and tropical Jamaica may seem an odd pairing, but they're among a wide variety of planned merchandise featuring the dreadlocked musician's image, name or message — backpacks, stationery, headphones, musical instruments, restaurants.

    Items are expected to hit the market in mid-2010.

    Marley "would be amused to know that his face is being used to brand a wide range of products and services, some of which he himself might never have thought of using," said Professor Carolyn Cooper, former coordinator of the reggae studies unit at Jamaica's University of the West Indies.

    But Cooper added in an interview that the Marley family is absolutely right to emulate the estates of Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and other pop heroes in protecting the trademark. Presley's estate brought in nearly $55 million in revenue last year.

    Marley's lyrics promoting social justice made him an icon. His acceptance by mainstream America was sealed when the Budweiser frogs grooved to his song "Jamming" in a 1999 beer ad. His "One Love" anthem woos tourists to Jamaica on TV spots featuring white-sand beaches and swaying palms.

    Mark Roesler, whose marketing and talent agency, CMG Worldwide, has a client list that includes the estates of James Dean and Marilyn Monroe, says protecting a famous name is a long-term task.

    "If a celebrity has not had the focus and the attention that a personality like James Dean has had over the years, it is much more difficult to just suddenly get started and 'clean up the market,'" said Roesler, who is not involved with the Marley effort.

    Most of Marley's heirs are also musicians, including his widow, Rita, and son Ziggy, who won four Grammys with the Melody Makers, a band that included another son, Stephen, and daughters Sharon and Cedella. Son Damian has won three Grammys.

    The family says it cares less about moving merchandise than about preserving the patriarch's legacy in such efforts as the Marley organic coffee farm, whose product is dried, roasted and packaged in bags emblazoned with Marley song titles such as "One Love" and "Mystic Morning."

    "People need to know what they're getting is from the Marley movement, a movement of sustainability," said son Rohan as he showed The Associated Press around the farm, a teeth-rattling drive over rutted roads from Kingston, the capital.

    The former University of Miami star linebacker, who resembles his father, said an undisclosed share of Marley Coffee proceeds will go toward youth soccer programs in Jamaica, an island as crime-ridden and poor as it is alluringly beautiful.
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

  • #2
    Well Bob neva leff no will an him lef Ja an its people fi prosper off ah it. If him pickney dem feel say di millions whey dem haff nuh enough an waan beat down di likkle man ah street den ah so.

    Bob did say him heart nah bleed fi money outta di music, but "if dunny fi come out a music mek dunny come". Mi wouldn't like fi know say Bob pickney dem hungry so if is money dem waan dem daddy leff it all bout fi dem. Granted: as long as a hungry dem hungry.

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    • #3
      "...an island as crime-ridden and poor as it is alluringly beautiful".
      Good one!
      __________________

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      • #4
        Jawge 'the likkle man' they said is not who they are after as that is probably too hard to police...

        "Rather than focusing on street vendors, who hawk everything from Bob Marley T-shirts to beach towels, the partnership is creating a new line of products dubbed "House of Marley" and will police the trademark vigilantly.

        "You're never going to stop the guys in the streets, flea markets ... but you try as much as you can," said Salter."

        but who do you think provides 'the likkle man' with all the trinkets etc. they sell with Marley's image on them? Some 'likkle man' doin' their own thing but some 'big man' are making big bucks off the unlicensed stuff.
        Peter R

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        • #5
          Exile, I didn't know you appreciated poetry? The same line struck me.. sad but true..
          Peter R

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          • #6
            are you for real....please do not take on something that is bigger than you! so what if he left no will? he has LEGALLY recognised heirs who are entitled to his ENTIRE estate!

            Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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            • #7
              Aha...so much you don't know about me....heh, heh....

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              • #8
                Yes, I pickup on it too.........
                Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                Comment


                • #9
                  Top Ten Earning Dead Musicians

                  October 14, 2009 associatedcontent.com
                  Top 10 Highest Earning Deceased Musicians, Page 2 of 2 - Associated Content - associatedcontent.com


                  1. Kurt Cobain, $60 million (died 1994)
                  2. Elvis Presley, $52 million (died 1978)
                  3. John Lennon, $24 million (died 1980)
                  4. George Harrison $22 million (died 2001)
                  5. Ray Charles, $10 million (died 2004)
                  6. Tupac Shakur, $9 million (died 1996)
                  7. Johnny Cash, $7 million (died 2003)
                  8. Bob Marley, $7 million (died 1981)
                  9. Jimi Hendrix, $6 million (died 1970)
                  10. James Brown, $5 million (died 2006)

                  Michael Jackson - To Be Determined

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