Tag Archives: crave

Utah cookie war between Crumbl, Dirty Dough and Crave heats up

There’s a war going on in Utah – not over politics or drugs – but cookies.

Crumbl Cookies, which has more than 300 stores in 36 states, has declared war on smaller competitors Dirty Dough (six stores in Utah and Florida) and Crave (nine stores in Utah and Florida.) And it’s setting social media ablaze.

“Are cookies really worth suing over?” asked a TikTok user. For the founders of Crumbl, the answer is yes.

A Crumbl Rocky Road cookie.

Crumbl Cookies

The lawsuits started flying in May, when Crumbl separately sued Dirty Dough and Crave, claiming in part that both brands’ “packaging, decor and presentation” is “confusingly similar” to its own. Crumbl filed the suits in Utah, where it’s headquartered.

Dirty Dough fired back with commercials mocking Crumbl.

In one advertisement, a big SUV pulls up next to a kids’ lemonade stand. A group of men jump out, telling the kids to “shut down the entire operation.” A young girl replies, “Are you crazy, why?” To which he responds, “Cause you’re selling cookies – that’s our thing.” 

Dirty Dough also launched a billboard campaign in Utah, including one that read: “Cookies so good – we’re being sued!”

“It’s a silly situation,” said Dirty Dough founder Bennett Maxwell, “and it’s just like, OK, we’re gonna have some fun with it.”

He added: “Just imagine pizza companies doing to each other, right? Like sending pictures of a pepperoni pizza, putting them in a lawsuit, and say ‘Look, your pepperoni pizza looks mightly similar to mine’.”

The co-founder of Crave, Trent English, also believes Crumbl’s accusations are half-baked. 

“Our branding is black and gold. [Crumbl’s is] pink and black. Their logo is … a chef wearing a hat. Ours is two overlapping cookies,” English said. “I don’t really see any confusion at all. I think most people can tell us apart just fine.”

Exterior of a Crave cookie store.

CNBC

Interior of a Crumbl cookie store with company’s logo on the wall.

CNBC

Founded in 2017, Crumbl – which has 6 million followers on TikTok and 3 million followers on Instagram – has reviewers that rate its cookie flavors that are released each week.

In the lawsuits, the company claims the two other cookie makers stole its idea to release new flavors every week.

“They don’t want us to do rotating flavors,” Bennett said. “Because I mean, you know, they invented that – the ability to rotate and have it for a limited time offer – apparently Crumbl invented it five years ago.”

Dirty Dough’s founder told CNBC that since the lawsuits were filed, social media around the “cookie wars” has been great for business – with sales doubling.  Meanwhile, Crave says the company has seen a 50% jump in sales since Crumbl sued. 

Exterior of a Dirty Dough store in Utah.

CNBC

CNBC interviewed Crumbl co-founders Jason McGowan and Sawyer Hemsley in 2021 about their booming business. At the time, Hemsley told CNBC: “I have to pinch myself every day, because we talk about sprinkles over the conference table. And – and pink frosting.” 

After the lawsuits were filed, CNBC reached out to Crumbl for a response. However, the founders turned down a request for an interview and instead sent a statement over email, which read in part: “Crumbl has taken legal action against two companies for trade dress and trademark infringement, one of which had stolen Crumbl recipes and trade secrets.”

Maxwell, the Dirty Dough founder, denied stealing Crumbl’s recipes. “Just look at our cookie again, you can’t get a more different product, you can taste it and it’s so much different,” he said.

A side by side comparison of Crumbl, Crave, and Dirty Dough’s marketing & packaging materials, as laid forth in the complaint(s).

CNBC

Crumbl may face a high legal hurdle.

“It may be tough for Crumbl to show that consumers mistakenly believe that the defendant’s cookies are coming from Crumbl,” said Dyan Finguerra-Ducharme, a trademark attorney and partner at Pryor Cashman in New York. She has no connection to the case. 

“Crumbl came up with a great idea – a whole business model, which [is] rotating cookies each week, delivering them warm in a box that fits the cookies snugly,” Finguerra-Ducharme said. “The problem is that Crumbl’s idea is not protected by intellectual property law.”

So, could the case go to a jury?  

“It could be dismissed by showing a judge that as a matter of law, these marks don’t look alike,” Finguerra-Ducharme told CNBC.

“And if the marks don’t look alike,” she added, “that’s where the cookie crumbles.”

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Netflix is raising prices by $1-$2 a month

Netflix!
Photo: ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

Netflix announced tonight that it’s raising the prices for all of its subscription tiers by $1 to $2 a month. It’s been roughly a year and a half since the streamer’s last price hike, which hit in October of 2020.

The increases—which will “roll out” for existing subscribers in coming months, as part of the company’s ongoing efforts to not get torch-and-pitchforked every time they do this—break down like this: Premium subscribers, who currently pay $18 a month for 4K content and 4 screens at once, will be knocked up to $20 a month. Standard plan members (HD content, 2 screens) will be jumped up a buck fifty, from $14 to $15.50. And Basic members, who don’t get HD content, will now be paying $10 a month for the privilege.

The price increases come at an undeniably weird time for the service, which is simultaneously riding about as high as it’s ever been, while also finding itself facing down stiffer competition than it’s ever seen. On the one hand, Netflix’s subscriber base is about as good as it could conceivably be at the moment, with the service currently supporting some 200+ million subscribers planet-wide, and 74 million in the U.S. and Canada—where these latest price increases are aimed.

The problem is that Netflix’s subscriber base is also, well, as high as it can conceivably be at the moment; when you’re already installed in the homes of basically every internet-enabled home in a decent chunk of the planet, it’s hard to carve out that pesky “growth” that shareholders crave. Hence, partly, the price increases, which put Netflix on par (or a little past, for Premium) HBO Max, which has generally been the priciest plan in the game at $15 a month. (For comparison, Disney+ remains at $8 a month, Paramount+ at $10 a month, Apple TV+ at $5, and Hulu just kicked its own prices up to $13 a month last year.) (That’s for the non-ad versions of the services, to be clear.)

And the mere length of the above parenthetical demonstrates the other issue Netflix is currently facing down: There are a lot of other companies out here right now trying to house its lunch. And while its multi-year head start in the streaming wars is obviously a boon, the company still needs to keep throwing as much money as it can at original content to keep subscribers happy. (Especially since studios who were once eager to license their shows to the streamer for some quick post-life profits are now far more reticent to feed a rival the content that it needs.)

The upshot of all of that being: Expect that little monthly bill to get a little less little in the coming months.

[via The Verge]

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Michael Bisping slams Jake Paul over his 2022 goals list: “Your goal should be to attain credibility in the fight world, that’s what real fighters crave” –

Former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping has slammed Jake Paul over his 2022 goals list.

Earlier this evening Paul (5-0 Boxing) took to social media where he released four personal goals for the upcoming year.

1. Buy Mayweather Promotions and save them from bankruptcy
2. Hire stylist for Floyd Mayweather
3. Take selfie with Oprah
4. Go 2 chiropractor 2 heal back from carrying the sport of boxing

While Michael Bisping was not directly mentioned by ‘The Problem Child’, he decided to share his two cents with the following words of advice.

“Your goal should be to attain credibility in the fight world. That’s what real fighters crave. Currently you have zero.” – Bisping captioned Paul’s post.

Jake Paul returned to the squared circle just two weeks ago for a rematch with Tyron Woodley. The result was a sixth round knockout for Paul, who flattened the former UFC champion with a right hand (see that here).

Michael Bisping refutes claims that Paul vs. Woodley 2 was fixed

Despite Paul’s perfect record, current UFC commentator Michael Bisping believes ‘The Problem Child’ needs to face an actual boxer in order to earn any clout amongst the fighting community.

With that said, Jake Paul is apparently targeting a professional boxer for his next fight, but it’s not Tommy Fury as many pundits were expecting. Instead, the YouTube sensation is eyeing a matchup with boxing veteran and former middleweight title holder Julio César Chávez Jr.

If that fight does come to fruition, Paul will have the chance to silence some of his critics. Michael Bisping had previously ripped the ‘Paul vs. Woodley 2’ bout with the following assessment:

“Terrible, an absolutely terrible fight. Unbelievably bad and for all the talk and the opportunity that Tyron had. And look, I’m not here to talk sh*t about Tyron Woodley. I like the guy, I respect the career that he’s had, and I don’t want to say anything that’s gonna make it awkward when I see him because I will see him soon.” Bisping said. “But the reality is it was a f*cking sh*t fight from both men. There was a lot of hugging involved and of course the knockout was good for Jake Paul. Of course that’s what everyone wants to get, but he’s lucky that he got that because I think had that gone to a decision and that was the state of the fight, nobody wants to watch either of them two fight ever f*cking again.”

Do you agree with the recent comments from former UFC champion Michael Bisping regarding boxer Jake Paul?

This article appeared first on BJPENN.COM



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