One time I attended Philcon I went to a panel on Hammer films, and one of the panelists was an expert on Kensington Gore. He spent a good five or six minutes talking about what was in it and how it was made. 


Decades ago, around the time the first Antonio Banderas movie came out, I reprinted the original Zorro novel at Tor Books. It was technically in public domain but I threw $5,000 at Zorro Properties anyway, just so I could use their licensed trademarks and because, honestly, it seemed easier to work with them than against them.
Isn't part of why companies started using goofy spellings for things, like Syfy, so they could trademark the names?
Isn't part of why companies started using goofy spellings for things, like Syfy, so they could trademark the names?
I thought they did that to sound less nerdy.
This is correct. I worked at NBC Universal / SCI FI Channel at the time as the editor of scifi dot com (I resigned shortly before the brand transitioned to Syfy), and I recall very clearly our conversations with corporate management about the rebranding.Honestly, I believe it was mostly a trademark issue.
They wanted a name they could own, unlike “Sci-Fi”
Isn't part of why companies started using goofy spellings for things, like Syfy, so they could trademark the names?
That's also why you'll see Star Trek content frequently references the Starship Enterprise with "Starship" capitalized and in italics, as if it's part of the name. Enterprise and U.S.S. Enterprise are too general to be trademarked, but adding the extra word makes it specific enough that they can protect it.
One time I attended Philcon I went to a panel on Hammer films, and one of the panelists was an expert on Kensington Gore. He spent a good five or six minutes talking about what was in it and how it was made.![]()
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