Imagine this scene in the back office of a cabaret venue in Las Vegas sometime in 2015: Maren Wade, a performer, is filing federal trademark paperwork after writing a column for Las Vegas Weekly titled “Confessions of a Showgirl” for a year. Not because she expected to fight a worldwide celebrity. Because she wanted to safeguard what she had created—a live performance, a touring production, a book, and an audience. The trademark appears. She stores it in a file. No one questions it for ten years.
Everything changes when Taylor Swift releases The Life of a Showgirl, her twelfth studio album.
The scale and speed of the merchandise machine that followed Swift’s album release was astounding. It included drink tumblers, candles, hairbrushes, and clothing tags. Swift’s company, TAS Rights Management, applied to trademark the phrase in fourteen international classes, ranging from ponchos to disposable napkins, within weeks of the album’s release. It had established a specialized online store. It had started working with national partners on brand collaborations. By all accounts, it had moved quickly and significantly, just like Taylor Swift’s business. A record-breaking four million copies of the album were sold in its first week, propelling the title into cultural saturation almost immediately.
There was only one issue. TAS Rights Management had already received a negative response from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Federal examiners rejected the trademark application for “The Life of a Showgirl” after finding it confusingly similar to Maren Wade’s already-registered mark. Wade claims in her lawsuit, which was filed on March 30 in federal court in Los Angeles, that this rejection ought to have prompted a phone call. A dialogue. Acknowledgment of the prior rights to a closely related name held by another creator. Rather, the complaint claims that Swift’s team never got in touch with Wade. They never asked for her permission. They simply continued to sell.
“Reverse confusion,” the legal theory at the heart of the case, is a particularly pertinent idea in this particular situation. The typical situation in which a smaller party mimics a larger one is not described by reverse confusion. It explains what happens when a powerful commercial force enters an area and completely overshadows the original creator, leading the public to believe that the smaller party is copying them. Eight out of ten Google autocomplete results for her exact registered mark now lead to Swift’s album, according to Wade’s legal filing. Before Wade’s single hit, a YouTube search for “Confessions of a Showgirl” yields nine consecutive Swift results. In her own name, the performer who spent more than ten years building the brand is now practically invisible.
Important Information: Taylor Swift Merchandise Lawsuit — Maren Wade v. TAS Rights Management
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Plaintiff | Maren Wade (legal name: Maren Flagg) |
| Plaintiff Background | Las Vegas cabaret performer, columnist, author, podcaster |
| Plaintiff Trademark | “Confessions of a Showgirl” — registered since 2015 |
| Origin of Trademark | 2014 column in Las Vegas Weekly; expanded into live show, touring production, book, podcast |
| Defendant | Taylor Swift / TAS Rights Management |
| Album at Issue | The Life of a Showgirl (Taylor Swift’s 12th studio album, 2025) |
| Merchandise at Issue | Candles, drink tumblers, hairbrushes, apparel, and other branded goods |
| Lawsuit Filed | March 30, 2026 |
| Injunction Motion Filed | April 7, 2026 |
| Court | Federal Court, Los Angeles |
| Injunction Hearing | Tentatively May 27, 2026 |
| USPTO Action | Previously denied TAS Rights Management’s trademark application for “The Life of a Showgirl” — cited confusing similarity to Wade’s mark |
| Plaintiff’s Attorney | Jaymie Parkkinen |
| Key Legal Theory | “Reverse confusion” — junior user’s commercial dominance displaces senior trademark holder in public perception |
| Album Sales | The Life of a Showgirl — 4 million units in first week |
| Swift’s Response | No public comment as of filing date |

Jaymie Parkkinen, Wade’s lawyer, put it simply: the Trademark Office’s rejection of Swift’s team’s application to register the name ought to have been the end of it. The conflict was noted by the system. It recognized the ambiguity. No, it said. “When someone is told no by the federal government and keeps going anyway, litigation isn’t a choice — it’s the only option left,” Parkkinen said to Rolling Stone. A week after filing the initial lawsuit on March 30, Wade filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, requesting that the court stop all sales of merchandise under the “Life of a Showgirl” name while the case is pending. There will be a hearing in Los Angeles on May 27.
The asymmetry here is worth stopping to consider. One of the most advanced intellectual property enforcement systems in the entertainment sector is Swift’s operation. With a level of accuracy that most entertainment lawyers would envy, her team consistently files trademark applications, pursues infringers, and defends her brand. Everyone following the case is aware of the irony that this same operation appears to have gotten past a USPTO rejection and into a merchandising rollout without resolving the underlying conflict. The legal team might have thought the names were sufficiently different to move forward. It’s also possible that the record-breaking album’s commercial momentum simply outweighed the legal caution that would have been necessary in a cleaner process.
The human aspect of the case is remarkably well-captured in Wade’s filing. “Confessions of a Showgirl is not one mark among many for plaintiff,” it says. “She has only one.” Compared to most legal boilerplate, that sentence has a different impact. There are no backup brands in Wade’s portfolio. Being buried in search results will harm her reputation because she lacks a worldwide marketing operation. She has a single identity, a single registered name, and ten years of experience. That asymmetry between a performer with one trademark and a machine with fourteen international classes is what this lawsuit is really telling, regardless of the outcome of the May hearing.
As this develops, it’s difficult to ignore the more general question it poses for any independent creator operating under a registered brand in a time when a single big release has the power to instantly change how people remember a name on the internet. The purpose of trademark registration is to stop this type of commercial displacement. Wade did as he was told. She created something recognizable over the years, registered early, and used the mark consistently. Candles and hairbrushes are not really the subject of the lawsuit. When someone on the other side sells four million albums in a single week, it raises the question of whether the legal safeguards for smaller artists are meaningful.
