Ariana Grande sues Forever 21 for $10-Million look-alike ad campaign
POPULAR SINGER Ariana Grande has sued Forever 21 for $10 million, accusing the fashion retailer and a beauty company started by its billionaire founders’ daughters of piggybacking off her fame and influence to sell their wares.
In a complaint filed on Monday, Grande said Forever 21 and Riley Rose misappropriated her name, image, likeness, and music, including by employing a “strikingly similar” looking model, in a website and social media campaign early this year.
She said this followed the breakdown of talks for a joint marketing campaign because Forever 21 would not pay enough for “a celebrity of Ms. Grande’s stature,” whose longer-term endorsements generate millions of dollars in fees.
Grande has more than 65 million Twitter followers and 163 million Instagram followers. A core part of the 26-year-old’s fan base overlaps Forever 21’s and Riley Rose’s target markets.
“Forever 21 does not comment on pending litigation as per company policy,” the company said in a statement. “That said, while we dispute the allegations, we are huge supporters of Ariana Grande and have worked with her licensing company over the past two years. We are hopeful that we will find a mutually agreeable resolution and can continue to work together in the future.”
Riley Rose did not immediately respond on Tuesday to e-mailed requests for comment. The daughters of Forever 21’s founders Do Won and Jin Sook Chang, Linda and Esther Chang, opened the first Riley Rose boutique in 2017.
According to Grande’s complaint, Forever 21 and Riley Rose misappropriated at least 30 images and videos, including by using audio and lyrics from her recent No. 1 single “7 Rings,” and by using the look-alike model.
“The resemblance is uncanny,” the complaint said. — Reuters