A world of cracking ideas
The Science Museum, in collaboration with the UK Intellectual Property Office, has launched A world of cracking ideas, an inventions exhibition aimed at children.
The exhibition is themed around the Wallace and Gromit characters. Wallace is always inventing devices for dropping him from bed into his trousers, automatically making the breakfast, and so on. Typical, I suspect, of the coverage is last Saturday's Telegraph article, which is joky and includes the line "thinking up potty ideas is a national pastime."
Not so potty is the amount of money that has presumably been made by the mismatched pair of Wallace and Gromit themselves. The master who is less intelligent than his silent dog (who constantly saves the day) -- and he doesn't realise it. Despite everything, Gromit is loyal in truly dog-like fashion.
Besides the actual television and movie productions, licensing out rights to use the characters must be lucrative. I had a look to see what intellectual property rights had been registered by Aardman Animations Limited. I didn't find any patents or designs, but trade mark rights have been registered to protect merchandising of products.
Most of these are words such as Creature Comforts and Shaun the Sheep (also Timmy Time and Chop Socky Chooks, which were new to me). Chicken Run was registered by DreamWorks Animation LLC, which is a reminder that relying on a company name doesn't always work. Similarly, a separate company, Wallace & Gromit Limited, has registered the trade mark Wallace & Gromit and also the following, purely visual, British trade mark 2367443 showing Gromit:
British trade mark 2367441 shows Wallace in similar mode. Both were filed in 2004 and both cover 12 classes of products or services (as registrations are made for specified goods or services in specified classes), such as beverages, snacks, motorcyclist clothing (!) and the obvious entertainment services. The British database can be searched for free on the Web.
No trade marks showed the two as companions, to my surprise. And what if someone tried to use Gromit showing different expressions, or for other areas of business ? One for the lawyers to sort out.