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In the mid-to-late 2010s, professional athletes began to host their own podcasts, often covering the sports they played and leagues they were involved in. Sometimes, these player-hosts were still active upon the launch of their podcasts. Professional athlete-hosted podcasts began to become more widespread in the 2020s.
Locked On Sports was largely a self-financed enterprise by founder David Locke, with only a single infusion of $750,000 of venture capital announced in 2019. [1] Investors in the fledgling network included Bruce Gordon, formerly the chief financial officer of Disney Interactive Media Group, focused podcast investor Podfund, and Summit Capital, a Utah-based private equity firm.
The hosts argue over whether a certain sports figure or team will go over or under a certain number (e.g. 40 home runs, 60 wins). Reali also announces the topics for this segment, holding cards up with the statistic, as well. In order to help prevent a "push" (a Wilbon trademark), a decimal figure is sometimes used (e.g. 2.5 touchdowns).
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has rejected Washington’s initial trademark application for the “Washington Football Team” name that it played under in 2020. Trademark ...
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has refused a request by the NHL’s Utah Hockey Club to trademark the name Utah Yetis. The USPTO issued a refusal Jan. 9, citing the “likelihood of ...
A sports law professor described the judge’s ruling as a “potentially industry-shifting legal decision.” Penn State denied quick trademark win, judge questions sports merchandise industry ...
JJ Redick was the first active NBA player to launch a podcast. A. J. Hawk has been cited as the first active professional athlete to begin podcasting, having launched his Hawk Cast in 2014. [1] [2] JJ Redick was the first NBA player to launch a podcast while still an active player, hosting The Vertical on Yahoo! Sports in 2016.
If the trademark is the subject of a trademark registration, the complaint must provide the registration. Otherwise, the complaint must list: (a) the trademark; (b) the goods and/or services that are associated with the trademark; (c) the date on which the trademark was first used on such associated goods and/or services; and (d) the geographic ...