Updated
Updated · ms.now · May 28
Pattie Gonia Says Patagonia Suit Threatens $1 Million in Fees as Trademark Fight Escalates
Updated
Updated · ms.now · May 28

Pattie Gonia Says Patagonia Suit Threatens $1 Million in Fees as Trademark Fight Escalates

3 articles · Updated · ms.now · May 28

Summary

  • $1 million in potential legal fees—not Patagonia’s requested $1 in damages—is what Pattie Gonia says the trademark case could cost as she vows to fight to keep performing under her name.
  • Patagonia’s January lawsuit asks a California federal court to block her 2025 trademark application and stop her from using “Pattie Gonia,” arguing the name could dilute Patagonia’s famous trademarks.
  • Wyn Wiley, who says the drag persona helped build a 3 million-follower audience and raise $3.7 million for environmental causes, cast the case as an attempt to erase her activism, career and team.
  • Patagonia rejected that characterization, saying it supports advocacy but must protect its business and employees; Wiley also disputed the company’s claim that a prior agreement governed future use of the name.
  • The clash lands amid a broader U.S. backlash against drag performances and gender nonconformity, giving the trademark dispute wider political and cultural stakes.

Insights

Patagonia seeks only $1, but could this lawsuit financially ruin the activist it's suing?
When an eco-brand sues a climate activist, where does its mission truly lie?
Is a drag queen's brand playful parody or trademark theft worth millions?