Editor's Pick

once-upon-a-time-s2-ep15

Once Upon A Time

Series 2, Episode 15 The Queen Is Dead 23 May 13 00:41:02

Top Shows

Contact ONE News

One Direction can keep their name

Published: 7:57AM Wednesday September 05, 2012 Source: BANG Showbiz

British boy band One Direction are allowed to keep their name following a legal dispute with an American group of the same moniker.

The 'One Thing' hitmakers - made up of Harry Styles, Niall Horan, Liam Payne, Zayn Malik and Louis Tomlinson - had been sued by the California-based punk group earlier this year, who claimed they had they had the name first.

However, Simon Cowell head of the group's Syco record label - countersued the American group, accusing them of trying to "cash in" on the success of the 'What Makes You Beautiful' singers.

But now the two groups have reached an agreement that allows them both to continue using the name, a deal everyone is pleased with.

The US One Direction had claimed to have been using the name since 2009 and applied to trademark the name long before the British band, who were put together by Cowell on the UK edition of 'The X Factor' in 2010.

Since forming on the reality TV show, the British One Direction have become worldwide superstars and their debut album, 'Up All Night' was the first by a UK act to debut at number one on the US Billboard 200 all-genre albums chart.

Their second album, 'Take Me Home', will be released in November.

Entertainment News

Most Popular

  1. Woman 'dragged behind car' is critically injured
  2. Victoria to act after girl calls AFL star 'ape'
  3. Katy Perry thinks Robert Pattinson deserves better
  4. New Zealanders join global movement against GM food video
  5. Police probe fatal fire near Hokitika

rssLatest News

Advertising

How do you want your news?

  • Mobile Devices

    ONE News is available on iPhone, iPad, and as a mobile site.

  • News Feeds

    See when TVNZ have added new content. You can get the latest headlines anywhere.

  • Podcasts

    Enjoy TVNZ on the move - a wide range of programmes and highlights are available.