Taylor Swift Left Hanging Over âThe Life of a Showgirlâ Trademark
Taylor Swift Left Hanging Over âThe Life of a Showgirlâ TrademarkKhushali SrivastavaTue, March 10, 2026 at 6:29 AM UTC
0
Photo Credit: Aeon/GC Images via Getty Images
Taylor Swiftâs legal process behind the branding has reportedly hit a small obstacle. Federal records show that the United States Patent and Trademark Office has paused a trademark application linked to Swiftâs phrase âThe Life of a Showgirl.â The filing was submitted by the singerâs company, TAS Rights Management LLC.
Taylor Swift facing roadblock over âThe Life of a Showgirlâ trademark is temporary
The pause in Taylor Swiftâs federal application process does not mean the trademark request for the phrase âThe Life of a Showgirlâ has been denied. Instead, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) placed the application on hold while it evaluates two earlier marks that could potentially conflict with Swiftâs proposed title.
One of the marks prompting the delay is âConfessions of a Showgirl,â a phrase registered in 2015 by Las Vegas performer Maren Wade. According to USA Today, Wade originally filed the application in 2014. The USPTO later granted federal protection for the title in connection with entertainment services, including live performances, stage productions, television programming, and digital publications such as blogs and e-zines.
Because both Wadeâs trademark and Swiftâs proposed title use the phrase âof a showgirl,â trademark examiners believe people might think the two brands are connected. This could cause confusion about whether they come from the same source.
Advertisement
A second factor affecting Swiftâs filing involves a separate trademark application for the single word âShowgirl.â In December 2024, Harlem Brands Inc. applied to register âShowgirlâ for a line of perfumes and related fragrance products. That application has already progressed through examination and received a Notice of Allowance.
Trademark attorney Josh Gerben explained in a recent blog post that roughly one in five trademark applications encounters a similar outcome of refusal during the review process. âThis type of refusal is fairly common. About 20% of all trademarks filed with the USPTO receive a similar refusal,â he stated.
âThe main point of this argument will be to persuade the USPTO that consumers are unlikely to think that âConfessions of a Showgirlâ and âThe Life of a Showgirlâ come from the same source,â Gerben further wrote. In Swiftâs case, the attorney noted that the two titles may communicate separate ideas. âConfessions of a Showgirl,â he said, reads like âa personal narrative or tell-all account,â while âThe Life of a Showgirlâ suggests âa broader portrayal of the experience itself.â
The post Taylor Swift Left Hanging Over âThe Life of a Showgirlâ Trademark appeared first on Reality Tea.
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ