MATTEL INC. Federal court drops suit against artist



The judge said the toy maker can't use trademark laws to censor free speech.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A federal appeals court dismissed a copyright lawsuit Mattel Inc. brought against a Utah artist who shot a photographic series depicting Barbie dolls naked in a blender, wrapped in a tortilla and sizzling on a wok.
Mattel sued Tom Forsythe, a self-described "artsurdist" from Kanab, Utah, who used the fashion dolls in a work titled "Food Chain Barbie" to criticize "America's culture of consumption and conformism." One photo, "Malted Barbie," featured a nude Barbie on a vintage Hamilton Beach malt machine.
The toy maker sued Forsythe in 1999, alleging copyright infringement and dilution of copyright. Mattel said the pictures, which often showed Barbie posed in sexually provocative positions, could confuse consumers into believing the company was behind the works.
A federal judge in Los Angeles also had dismissed the suit. Mattel took the case to the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which agreed Monday with U.S. District Judge Ronald S.W. Lew.
The appeals court said the lawsuit "may have been groundless and unreasonable." In addition, the court said Forsythe had a First Amendment right to lampoon Barbie.
"Mattel cannot use trademark laws to censor all parodies or satires which use its name," Judge Harry Pregerson wrote for the three-judge panel.
El Segundo, Calif.-based Mattel did not return calls seeking comment.
Forsythe's photos
Forsythe has said he uses Barbie to criticize "the materialistic and gender-oppressive values" he believes the dolls embody. On Monday, he said that with the help of the attorneys who worked for free on his case, "I wasn't scared off. It was a ridiculous lawsuit."
One of Forsythe's photos, "Barbie Enchiladas," shows four Barbie dolls inside a lighted oven, wrapped in tortillas and covered with salsa in a casserole dish. The appeals court said Forsythe earned $3,659 selling postcards of his "Food Chain Barbie" series.
Forsythe isn't the only one Mattel has sued over Barbie. In January, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of Danish pop band Aqua to distribute the suggestive 1997 pop song, "Barbie Girl," in which a baby-doll voice proclaims: "I'm a blonde bimbo girl."