Mariah Carey |
All Mariah Carey wants is to be crowned the “Queen of Christmas.”
The Washington Post reports the 53-year-old pop singer is trying to trademark that title so that she alone can sell goods — perfume, lotion, sunglasses, face masks — and market herself as the Queen of Christmas. Her application, filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, argues that Carey is inextricably linked to the moniker, citing a 2021 Billboard article anointing her the “undisputed Queen of Christmas.” Her claim to the title largely stems from her 1994 smash hit and perennial holiday season earworm “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” which Billboard said was the most popular song of all time atop its Holiday 100 chart.
Chan (top), Love |
“Christmas has come way before any of us on earth, and hopefully will be around way after any of us on earth,” Chan told the New Yorker. “And I feel very strongly that no one person should hold onto anything around Christmas or monopolize it in the way that Mariah seeks to in perpetuity. That’s just not the right thing to do. Christmas is for everyone. It’s meant to be shared; it’s not meant to be owned.”
Love’s ties to Christmas music go back nearly 60 years, Variety reported. She cemented herself as a yuletide fixture in the 1960s by singing several songs on “A Christmas Gift for You From Phil Spector,” what many consider the best Christmas pop album ever, according to Variety. She got a boost in the mid-1980s when she appeared on David Letterman’s late-night show to sing the classic “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” and returned annually to sing it on Letterman’s shows until 2014, the last holiday season before he retired. According to Variety, Love has kept the tradition alive by crooning her Christmas standby on other TV programs as the holidays roll around.
All of that entitles her to keep calling herself the Queen of Christmas, Love wrote Monday in a Facebook post.
“David Letterman officially declared me the Queen of Christmas 29 years ago, a year before she released ‘All I want For Christmas Is You’ and at 81 years of age I’m NOT changing anything. I’ve been in the business for 52 years, have earned it and can still hit those notes!
Carey is involved in an unrelated dispute tied to her most famous holiday song. In June, songwriter Andy Stone sued Carey, alleging that “All I Want for Christmas Is You” infringes on the copyright of his song with the same name, which dropped several years before Carey’s megahit, The Post reported. Stone filed a revised version of his lawsuit at the end of that month, but there has been no movement in the case since then, according to court records. Lawyers for Carey and Sony Music Entertainment have not filed anything in the case.
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