Superstar Mariah Carey wants to trademark her unofficial honorific, the “Queen of Christmas,” for use on merch including apparel, food, and decor.
![Is anyone the true queen of Christmas?](https://20627419.fs1.hubspotusercontent-na1.net/hub/20627419/hubfs/The Hustle/Assets/GIFs/2068929095-HS-News-Brief_2022-08-16T231206.981Z.webp?width=595&height=400&name=2068929095-HS-News-Brief_2022-08-16T231206.981Z.webp)
But she’s meeting fierce resistance from two singers who argue she’s not the sole ruler of the Yuletide throne, per Variety.
Carey’s rise to royalty…
… began in 1994, when she released “All I Want for Christmas Is You.”
- It’s the only certified Diamond holiday song, and earns Carey an estimated ~$2.5m annually — or $72m+ total.
Billboard dubbed Carey the QOC in 1995, but it didn’t stick until a 2013 press release used it again and media outlets followed, per Bloomberg.
If not Carey, then who?
- Darlene Love, whose exhaustive discography includes Phil Spector’s Christmas Album. David Letterman called her the QOC; she performed “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” on his show from 1986 through 2014.
- Elizabeth Chan, who only releases Christmas music, including a 2021 album called “Queen of Christmas,” and is suing to stop Carey. “All Access” and The New Yorker have named her queen.
- The Virgin Mary, according to Carey in December 2021, despite applying for the trademark in March 2021.
A court may ultimately decide whether anyone can claim to be the sole monarch of a holiday — something not even Elvira has done.
As Chen’s lawyer points out, Carey can sell QOC merch sans trademark, leaving Christmas open to all.
Topics:
Celebrity