Another salvo has been fired in the escalating taco war between fast-food giant Taco Bell and Wyoming-based Taco Johnâs, which started Tuesday after the much larger chain made a populist play for the Taco Johnâs trademark on the phrase âTaco Tuesday.â
Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon pokes fun at Taco Bell for trying to muscle in on its much smaller rivalâs trademark with a 16-second video on Twitter, posted Thursday, which shows Gordon sitting at his desk with a meal from Taco Johnâs spread out before him.Â
âTaco Bell, this taco beef is loco. Taco Tuesdayâs nachos,â Gordon quipped as he took a big bite of the taco. âTaco Johnâs, weâve got your back. OlĂ©!â
The tweet notes Gordonâs satirical talent probably wonât result in an invitation to guest-host SNL.
âBut, to be fair, @tacojohns is a Wyoming original,â the tweet adds, before listing a bunch of hashtags: #nachotacotuesday, #bringbackmexicanpizza #bringbackapplegrandes.
Ivy McGowan-Castleberry, communications and policy advisor for Gordon, said the tweet was a âbrief opportunity to have a little fun with a silly topic that has roots in Wyoming.â
The tweet had 4,500 views, though not many were âtaco-ingâ about the tweet.
Someone called âLone Scum, not Elon Muskâ suggested the tweet is âpretty cringe,â while someone called âThe Guyâ said, âAt least thereâs one thing we agree on. TJâs is the BOMB!â
No Legalese Here
Taco Bell filed its petition to cancel the Taco Johnâs âTaco Tuesdayâ trademark registration with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Tuesday. The document, however, reads more like a publicity-seeking press release than a court petition.
âPeople like tacos on Tuesdays,â it says. âThey just do. Itâs even fun to say: âTaco Tuesday.â Tacos have the unique ability to bring people together, and bring joy to their lives on an otherwise mediocre day of the week.â
The document goes on to claim that itâs ânot coolâ for Taco Johnâs to own a federal trademark registration for âTaco Tuesdayâ because it should belong to âthe masses.â Anything else would just be âchaos.â
Taco Johnâs fired back by offering its Taco Tuesday deal on every day of the week through the month of May.
âWe want to thank Taco Bell for reminding everyone that Taco Tuesday is best celebrated at Taco Johnâs,â CEO Jim Creel said. âWe love celebrating Taco Tuesday with taco lovers everywhere, and we want to offer a special invitation to fans of Taco Bell to liberate themselves by coming by to see how flavorful and bold tacos can be at Taco Johnâs all month long.â
Trademark Has Been Taco Johnâs For 34 Years
Taco Johnâs has owned the trademark on âTaco Tuesdayâ since 1989, though it was not actually the first to have it.
That distinction belongs to Gregoryâs, a Jersey-shore bar and grill, which said it coined the term in 1979 and owned the trademark starting in 1982. It lost the trademark, though, when it failed to file timely proof it was still using it.Â
Taco Johnâs filed for and was awarded the registration in 1989, although a legal scuffle between the two followed. The upshot was that Gregoryâs could still use the trademark in New Jersey, while Taco Johnâs would own it in the remaining 49 states.
The phrase, by the way, can be used by anyone in common speech. The trademark applies mainly to restaurants or those selling tacos to the general public. Not to families enjoying a taco night on Tuesday.
And therein lies a problem. Taco Johnâs very success with the trademark may be working against them in this age of social media. Searching for âTaco Tuesdayâ will turn up a few million hits.Â
Longevity generally makes a trademark unassailable. Except when they become so popular they can no longer be defended. The term for that is brand âgenericide.â Thermos, elevator, aspirin and even Appleâs âappâ store are among examples of things that were trademarked, until their own popularity and success did the trademark in.
Taco Johnâs Chief Marketing Officer Barry Westrum told Cowboy State Daily he believes Taco Johnâs trademark is still viable, as Tuesdays remain the chainâs best sales day of the week at all 370 of its restaurants across 23 states.
â(Taco Bell) just wants to put millions of dollars of advertising behind (Taco Tuesday) to appropriate it as their own,â Westrum said. âAnd we just donât think thatâs right for our customers, and for our franchisees, who have been enjoying Taco Tuesday for 34 years.â
Renee Jean can be reached at: Renee@CowboyStateDaily.com




