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If You're Not Firsts, You're Lasts: Intellectual Property Lasts

IP Goes Pop

Release Date: 04/03/2026

College Meets IP: The Intellectual Property of Higher Education show art College Meets IP: The Intellectual Property of Higher Education

IP Goes Pop

College may be one of pop culture’s favorite settings, but behind the scenes, universities are serious intellectual property owners. Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue explore how colleges use trademark, copyright, and licensing to protect logos, mascots, colors, slogans, and other brand assets across athletics, merchandise, and media. Using Rudy, Blue Chips, and The Social Network as touchpoints, they also examine how NIL rights have changed college sports, and where the line remains between an athlete’s personal brand and a school’s protected IP. In this episode: How colleges...

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If You're Not Firsts, You're Lasts: Intellectual Property Lasts show art If You're Not Firsts, You're Lasts: Intellectual Property Lasts

IP Goes Pop

In pop culture, “last” often just means “for now.” In intellectual property law, it means something much more concrete. In this episode of IP Goes Pop®, Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue explore what “last” really means across film, TV, music, and IP law. From The Last Samurai and The Last Jedi to Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Last of Us, “last” builds emotion, but rarely signals the end. In IP law, it does. The hosts explain how rights expire, can be lost early, become generic, or change by statute. Featuring examples like Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone patent and...

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IP Goes Pop

“If you’re not first, you’re last!” This week on IP Goes Pop!®, co-hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue chase down “IP firsts” and explain why these origin stories still matter to creators, brands, and inventors today.  The episode opens with our hosts’ personal firsts (early movie-theater memories, ticket-counter hijinks). Then the discussion shifts to media milestones, including the first televised commercial during a live sports broadcast, the first laugh track, and the first prime-time animated series. Moving from the screen to intellectual property firsts. Michael...

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IP Goes Pop

What color says luxury before you open the box? What sound makes you grab the popcorn before a movie starts? In this episode of IP Goes Pop!®, hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue explore how color, sound, and even scent can function as protectable trademarks. From Smell-O-Vision and John Waters’ Odorama cards (Polyester) to modern twists like The Artist and Black Mirror: Bandersnatch (and the trademark fight it sparked), the conversation shows how sensory storytelling grabs attention and how the law can recognize those cues as brand identifiers. Mike and Joe break down secondary meaning...

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IP Goes Pop

Enter the 36 Chambers of intellectual property as hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue spin the story of Wu-Tang Clan’s mysterious, one-of-a-kind album Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, and the first-of-its-kind legal case it inspired. From Staten Island’s kung-fu-infused hip-hop origins to a high-stakes sale cloaked in secrecy, Michael and Joe trace how a creative experiment in artistic exclusivity turned into a potential landmark in trade secret law. When Wu-Tang recorded a single physical copy of Shaolin and sold it under an ultra-restrictive contract, few imagined the album would pass...

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A Spider-Man Patent Saga: From Comics to Court show art A Spider-Man Patent Saga: From Comics to Court

IP Goes Pop

Swing into the world of intellectual property and untangle the legal threads behind legendary wall-crawling comic book character, Spider-Man. From comic book origins to blockbuster films, hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue trace Spidey’s journey through pop culture, the U.S. Patent Office, and the courtroom. From Stan Lee and Steve Ditko’s Amazing Fantasy #15 to Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland on the big screen, Michael and Joe explore how each era shaped Spider-Man’s generational appeal—and his IP story. Listeners’ “spidey senses” will tingle at the tale of a...

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IP Goes Pop

Filing for a copyright application doesn’t have to be an overly complex chore. You just need the right tools for the job. Hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue welcome Jessica Chinnadurai, Attorney Advisor from the U.S. Copyright Office, to introduce the Copyright Office’s . To set the table, Michael and Joseph discuss iconic tools and toolkits from pop culture, including the legendary Swiss Army knife, the versatile Leatherman multi-tool, famous fictional toolkits from MacGyver and Iron Man’s suit, and Ron Swanson’s woodworking expertise. This sets the stage for Jessica's breakdown...

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IP Goes Pop

In this second installment of "IP State of the Union: Billion-Dollar Character Acquisitions," IP Goes Pop!® co-hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue explore goodwill—the invisible yet invaluable asset fueling iconic franchises. They break down how studios leverage brand loyalty and cultural impact when acquiring legendary IP, where the goal extends beyond box office numbers to long-term equity through merchandise, theme parks, and fan engagement. The hosts analyze three major franchises: Star Wars (examining whether George Lucas's goodwill continues to pay dividends as Disney shifts toward...

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IP State of the Union: Billion Dollar Character Acquisitions (Part 1) show art IP State of the Union: Billion Dollar Character Acquisitions (Part 1)

IP Goes Pop

How have blockbuster IP deals reshaped modern filmmaking? Dive into Hollywood’s most strategic moves—from Disney’s Marvel takeover catalyzed by the success of Iron Man (2008) to the high-stakes integration of Fox properties. IP Goes Pop!®  co-hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue unpack how these mega acquisitions transformed standalone films into sprawling, interconnected cinematic universes that have redefined storytelling and set new profit standards. Michael and Joe also tackle the challenge of franchise fatigue, exploring how studios refresh their lineups by introducing...

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Recognizing and Avoiding Trademark Scams and Hoaxes with Jason Lott of the USPTO show art Recognizing and Avoiding Trademark Scams and Hoaxes with Jason Lott of the USPTO

IP Goes Pop

Trademark scams are on the rise, threatening businesses with costly setbacks and legal risks. Hosts Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue are joined , Managing Attorney for Trademark Customer Outreach at the (USPTO), to expose the deceptive tactics scammers use and provide practical tips to safeguard your intellectual property. From misleading solicitations and fake invoices to fraudulent renewal notices, this episode unpacks scams at every stage of the trademark process—before filing, during application prosecution, and post-registration. Jason shares real-world examples, red flags to...

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More Episodes

In pop culture, “last” often just means “for now.” In intellectual property law, it means something much more concrete. In this episode of IP Goes Pop®, Michael Snyder and Joseph Gushue explore what “last” really means across film, TV, music, and IP law. From The Last Samurai and The Last Jedi to Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Last of Us, “last” builds emotion, but rarely signals the end.

In IP law, it does. The hosts explain how rights expire, can be lost early, become generic, or change by statute. Featuring examples like Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone patent and It’s a Wonderful Life, this episode breaks down why IP rights don’t last forever, and why that matters.

For full show notes and to explore more episodes, please visit www.vklaw.com/newsroom-podcasts.

In this episode:

  • 🎬 Films like The Last Samurai, The Last of the Mohicans, and The Last Jedi—final… or not?

  • 📺 How Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Last of Us use “last” to build tension

  • ⏳ The four ways IP rights end: expiration, early loss, genericide, and statutory change

  • 📞 The expiration of Bell’s telephone patent—and what followed

  • 🎄 How a missed renewal helped make It’s a Wonderful Life a holiday staple

Key Moments:

(02:10) Firsts Before Lasts

(02:10) Movies With “Last” in the Title

(09:33) Television “Lasts”

(11:20) Musical “Lasts”

(13:40) Four Ways IP Rights Can End

(16:40) Patent Expiration: Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone patent

(21:03) Copyright Renewal Failure: It’s a Wonderful Life

(28:50) Trademark Genericide

(33:34) Legislative Extensions

(37:02) Final Thoughts

 

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