
Yesterday afternoon, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) posted a piece of disgusting propaganda[1] that glorifies the concept of a militarized police state forcefully entering people’s homes and businesses and leading them away in handcuffs and zip ties — all set to the classic Pokémon theme song and using numerous pieces of obviously copyrighted imagery from the ‘90s TV show.
There’s no chance The Pokémon Company, notorious for protecting their family-friendly reputation and profits with legal action[2], would let that fly, right?
Don’t hold your breath: The Pokémon Company’s former chief legal officer Don McGowan (who spent nearly 12 years there, as well as multi-year stints at Bungie and Microsoft) thinks there’s no way[3] that his former company would sue.
”Even if I was still at the company I wouldn’t touch this, and I’m the most trigger-happy CLO [Chief Legal Officer] I’ve ever met. This will blow over in a couple of days and they’ll be happy to let it,” he told IGN[5].[4]
Why? One reason is that like some other executives[6] Trump has previously and corruptly leveraged, some of The Pokémon Company’s leaders personally depend on the US’s good graces: “Many of their execs in the USA are on green cards,” he said. Another reason, he says, is that The Pokémon Company doesn’t want the press.
References
- ^ posted a piece of disgusting propaganda (x.com)
- ^ with legal action (www.theverge.com)
- ^ thinks there’s no way (www.ign.com)
- ^ he told (www.ign.com)
- ^ IGN (www.ign.com)
- ^ some other executives (www.theverge.com)