After the trademark conflict, the federal judge ordered the federal judge to stop using the title of the “situation system”.
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TI lost a major legal battle in New York, with a federal judge forbidding him and his company Grand Hustle Films from using its title “Scenario” for upcoming movies after a trademark dispute with another production company.
The ruling comes after Featherstone Entertainment, founded by Cylla Senii, sued the rapper’s company to use the term “situation”, which was marked in the trademark in 2023. Featherstone has been using the title since 2015 for web series, books, books and screen dramas with modern dating.
According to court documents, the TI and Grand Hustle films moved forward the project using titles from actor calls, interviews and production materials.
The company also tried to register variants such as “Scenario War” and “Scenario War”, but the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rejected at least one application due to similarity to Featherstone’s registered trademark.
Featherstone said it tried to solve the problem privately. The company met with Grand Hustle movies several times and claimed the studio agreed to change the name.
However, despite these discussions, Grand Hustle still submitted a new trademark application using the term “situational system”. Featherstone filed a lawsuit after not receiving a response to the cessation letter.
The judge supported Featherstone, ruling that the company could succeed in its trademark claims and that it would suffer damage if the Grand Hustle movie continues to use the name. The court issued an injunction to prevent TI and its team from using “situational systems” or similar terms to create, promote or distribute any content.
The order also requires a big buzz movie to scrub all promotional materials, websites and product names. They must also retain all documents related to the project.
TI replied that the title was never completed and that there was no use of Mark in the past few months.
The case is still active, but for now, the big buzz film is legally blocked from using controversial names when the lawsuit plays out.