Dramacow "Daddy" Derek Savage - Creator of Cool Cat Saves the Kids

This guy might want to have done a little more research before going all apeshit over his copyright, seeing how "Cool Cat" also happens to be the name of a Looney Tunes character from the 1960s. Who I'm sure Warner Bros. would still own the copyright on, seeing how he was about the only character from that era who actually caught on and carried on being used in more modern Looney Tunes stuff.

Wrong. One of the first things you learn when copyrighting something is that you cannot copyright a name. You can trademark one, which is different from a copyright, but if they didn't have the foresight to trademark it, Derek is in the clear.
 
Wrong. One of the first things you learn when copyrighting something is that you cannot copyright a name. You can trademark one, which is different from a copyright, but if they didn't have the foresight to trademark it, Derek is in the clear.

They almost surely trademarked the character at some point, but if they haven't used the character since the 60's, it's abandoned and fair game for Derek to use.
 
They almost surely trademarked the character at some point, but if they haven't used the character since the 60's, it's abandoned and fair game for Derek to use.

"Trademarks rights must be maintained through actual lawful use of the trademark. These rights will cease if a mark is not actively used for a period of time, normally 5 years in most jurisdictions. In the case of a trademark registration, failure to actively use the mark in the lawful course of trade, or to enforce the registration in the event of infringement, may also expose the registration itself to become liable for an application for the removal from the register after a certain period of time on the grounds of "non-use". It is not necessary for a trademark owner to take enforcement action against all infringement if it can be shown that the owner perceived the infringement to be minor and inconsequential."

~Wikipedia
 
Do we know where he got his fursuit? Like what is the history behind these videos? Who funded them? A fursuit itself is around $2000, even for a shit one like that. And then he had actors, etc. Is it by him or by a separate company or what?

Actually, Cool Cat's fursuit is the kind of thing you'd find in the low $100's. If I had to venture a guess, I'd say that I could probably get a Cool Cat of my own for somewhere in the ballpark of $450-650 depending upon who I asked and whether or not they needed to go out and buy more materials. The most expensive part of a suit is the head, and Cool Cat's is pretty basic, especially its eyes. Cool Cat looks like a "partial fursuit", meaning that it's not really a suit so much as it's just arm/leg sleeves and a head, the endings of which are hidden under clothes. (I might be wrong on that though.) That's even cheaper.

Cool Cat is nowhere near a $2,000 suit though, not unless someone took ol' Derek for a ride and highballed him.
 
I quite enjoy IHE's vids. I'd been meaning to watch his most recent one but forgot, damn.

Edit: Found a mirror of it. Wow if I'd have gone headfirst into watching this without knowing anything else I'd have assumed it was a parody of those '90s awareness videos. This like Poochie The Dog IRL.
 
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Actually, Cool Cat's fursuit is the kind of thing you'd find in the low $100's. If I had to venture a guess, I'd say that I could probably get a Cool Cat of my own for somewhere in the ballpark of $450-650 depending upon who I asked and whether or not they needed to go out and buy more materials. The most expensive part of a suit is the head, and Cool Cat's is pretty basic, especially its eyes. Cool Cat looks like a "partial fursuit", meaning that it's not really a suit so much as it's just arm/leg sleeves and a head, the endings of which are hidden under clothes. (I might be wrong on that though.) That's even cheaper.

Cool Cat is nowhere near a $2,000 suit though, not unless someone took ol' Derek for a ride and highballed him.

He still spent a good chunk of cash on that thing. I wonder what went through his head when he decided that making this video was his calling?
 
He still spent a good chunk of cash on that thing. I wonder what went through his head when he decided that making this video was his calling?
Derek shares a lot of similarities with the Bulletball guy. Autistics are obsessive, have a weird moral drive, and are totally out of touch from what other people value. Combine those traits for a bad time.

Also, Goin' Grink
 
He still spent a good chunk of cash on that thing. I wonder what went through his head when he decided that making this video was his calling?
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The most that WB's Cool Cat has been used since 1969 was cameos in the Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries. Otherwise nobody but Looney Tunes fans give a damn about him...

You could argue the name's so generic you can't really copyright it anyway.

As pointed out by others, you can't copyright a name. It would be trademarked. Disuse of a trademark generally renders it unenforceable as it no longer identifies any particular product or seller.

However, characters are copyrightable. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nichols_v._Universal_Pictures_Corp if you're interested in that general subject. If they wanted to go after it, they'd have to argue the actual character is infringing on their specific character. It's a pretty shaky argument, and I'm pretty sure given the nature of such a suit that they'd have to prove this guy actually had knowledge of the original Cool Cat character, or make a probably flimsy argument that the character is so famous he had to have seen it at some point.

Since I'm pretty sure the character hasn't been used all that often or at all in recent decades, I think this would be difficult to show, and that other than just being anthropomorphic cats and the name, the characters have nothing to do with each other.

The character, such as it is, seems pretty generic, and is unlikely to be infringing a copyright, sort of like you couldn't copyright other generic characters, e.g., an "Irish town drunk" or a "Jewish mother" or other such stereotypes.

Obviously, if Derek has stated otherwise or there's more to the Cool Cat character than I know, it could be infringing. I just don't think it is on a casual glance.
 
As pointed out by others, you can't copyright a name. It would be trademarked. Disuse of a trademark generally renders it unenforceable as it no longer identifies any particular product or seller.

However, characters are copyrightable. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nichols_v._Universal_Pictures_Corp if you're interested in that general subject. If they wanted to go after it, they'd have to argue the actual character is infringing on their specific character. It's a pretty shaky argument, and I'm pretty sure given the nature of such a suit that they'd have to prove this guy actually had knowledge of the original Cool Cat character, or make a probably flimsy argument that the character is so famous he had to have seen it at some point.

Since I'm pretty sure the character hasn't been used all that often or at all in recent decades, I think this would be difficult to show, and that other than just being anthropomorphic cats and the name, the characters have nothing to do with each other.

The character, such as it is, seems pretty generic, and is unlikely to be infringing a copyright, sort of like you couldn't copyright other generic characters, e.g., an "Irish town drunk" or a "Jewish mother" or other such stereotypes.

Obviously, if Derek has stated otherwise or there's more to the Cool Cat character than I know, it could be infringing. I just don't think it is on a casual glance.

There's not much similarities aside from the names. The Looney Tunes Cool Cat was a Larry Storch-voiced hippie/beatnik type. This Cool Cat is not.

And the question remains, would WB sue Daddy Derek for ripping off - if he did do that - an obscure Looney Tunes character that they don't really care about?
 
There's not much similarities aside from the names. The Looney Tunes Cool Cat was a Larry Storch-voiced hippie/beatnik type. This Cool Cat is not.

And the question remains, would WB sue Daddy Derek for ripping off - if he did do that - an obscure Looney Tunes character that they don't really care about?

He would have to actually be worth a Goddamn before they'd spend all their money just getting ready to sue him.
 
And the question remains, would WB sue Daddy Derek for ripping off - if he did do that - an obscure Looney Tunes character that they don't really care about?

No. My point (such as it is) was just that if Derek goes after others for infringing the copyright, the idea that he ripped it off himself isn't really relevant (and probably not true).
 
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