
Taylor SwiftThe new album is creating a great mix between people who are looking for her tunes, and those who want to get their goblin … at least according to a fantasy park.
The owners of Everah Park, Utah, are suing Tay-Tay for trademark infringement. They claim to own the rights to the name “evermore” and say Swift trampled on the rights when she started selling the branded goods to promote her album. of the same name.
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According to the documentation obtained by TMZ, the Evermore Park Camp claims that it has poured millions of dollars into building the facility, branding and selling its own equipment since the park was developed in 2014 and of course when it opened in 2018.
The park owners say they have had ‘Evermore’ brands for a number of different purposes – including clothing and other merchandise they sell … all of which they say were diluted after TS dropped in late 2020.
Evermore Park Brass have been claiming since the record was released that their search results are much lower in Google, and that it is causing legal confusion in the market … which they say is detrimental to the ultimate point.
They also claim that Tay’s team was aware that the trademark for ‘Evermore’ had been snatched up, but in any case continued with their own campaign … to think that they would drown the park.

Taylor’s team calls the case “frivolous” … and claims that the CEO of Evermore Park owes millions in construction fees, and according to them, the purpose of the claim is clear. Meanwhile, Evermore Park says it already went on strike last year, but is now claiming millions in damages.