Chooseco Explained

Chooseco LLC
Type:Private
Industry:Publishing
Hq Location City:Waitsfield, Vermont
Hq Location Country:U.S.
Key People:Shannon Gilligan (CEO)
Products:Choose Your Own Adventure

Chooseco LLC is an American publishing company based in Waitsfield, Vermont. Founded in 2003 by author R. A. Montgomery and publisher Shannon Gilligan, the company primarily releases reissues of Montgomery's Choose Your Own Adventure series of gamebooks.[1] [2]

History

Montgomery had approached Bantam Books in the 1970s with his idea for "Choose Your Own Adventure" novels based upon a concept created by Edward Packard and originally published by Constance Cappel's and R. A. Montgomery's Vermont Crossroads Press as the "Adventures of You" series, starting with Packard's Sugarcane Island in 1976. The initial books were popular, and the series took off with additional authors, with publication between 1978 and 1998, with over two hundred fifty million books sold in thirty-eight languages. In 2003, Montgomery and his wife Shannon Gilligan opted to form Chooseco to republish some of the classic titles of the series, create new titles, and option the franchise for other media.[3]

Lawsuits

In March 2007, Chooseco filed a lawsuit against car manufacturer DaimlerChrysler, claiming that the company's advertising campaign for their Jeep Patriot model, bearing the tagline "Choose Your Adventure", infringed on Chooseco's trademarks.[4] The suit was ultimately settled.[5]

Chooseco filed a similar trademark lawsuit in January 2019 against movie streaming platform Netflix following the release of , an interactive film produced and released by Netflix that uses the "choose your own adventure" phrase.[6] The company has also sent cease and desist notices to developers of indie video games on the itch.io storefront for using the term "choose your own adventure" to describe their game.[7]

Netflix had responded to Chooseco's suit with a number of defenses, including the assertion that the use of the term was artistic expression protected by the First Amendment (see Rogers v. Grimaldi),[8] and a request for Chooseco's trademark "Choose Your Own Adventure" to be cancelled on the basis that it had become genericised.[9] Netflix later conceded on the case and settled with Chooseco on undisclosed terms in November 2020.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chooseco Embarks on Its Own Adventure . Sally . Lodge . January 17, 2007 . Publishers Weekly.
  2. Web site: Why Choosing Your Own Adventure Can Really Pay Off . Doree . Shafrir . August 24, 2009 . Jezebel.
  3. Web site: 'Choose Your Own Adventure' publisher sues Netflix over 'Black Mirror: Bandersnatch' . Dan . D'Ambrosio . January 15, 2019 . October 1, 2019 . .
  4. Web site: Vermont publisher sues over Jeep ads . March 29, 2007 . ABC Money.
  5. Web site: Netflix's 'Black Mirror: Bandersnatch' Leads to "Choose Your Own Adventure" Trademark Lawsuit . Eriq . Gardner . January 11, 2019 . The Hollywood Reporter.
  6. Web site: Netflix's 'Black Mirror: Bandersnatch' Sued Over Use Of "Choose Your Own Adventure" . Dawn C. . Chmielewski . January 11, 2019 . Deadline Hollywood.
  7. Web site: Indies hit with takedowns over trademarked 'Choose Your Own Adventure' term . Alissa . McAloon . December 9, 2019 . December 9, 2019 . .
  8. Web site: Chooseco v. Netflix: Who Will Get to Choose Their Own Adventure?. Harvard Journal of Law & Technology. en. 2020-03-02. Justin. Cho.
  9. Web site: Netflix asks court to cancel the Choose Your Own Adventure trademark. Robertson. Adi. 2020-02-28. The Verge. en. 2020-03-02.
  10. Web site: Netflix Chooses Settlement to End Trademark Lawsuit Over 'Black Mirror' . 24 November 2020 . 25 November 2020 . .