The Pokémon Company's chatty former legal boss has thanked the media for publicising projects the company may then be compelled to shut down.
Speaking to Aftermath, McGowan was asked how the famously litigious Pokémon Company discovered and prioritised the many fan projects that may exist at any one time.
«Short answer: thanks to you folks,» McGowan said. «I would be sitting in my office minding my own business when someone from the company would send me a link to a news article, or I would stumble across it myself. I teach Entertainment Law at the University of Washington and say this to my students: the worst thing on earth is when your 'fan' project gets press, because now I know about you.»
To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings Newscast: Will Pokémon Legends: ZA be a Switch 2 launch title?Watch on YouTubeBut, as McGowan continued, the existence of a fan project did not automatically mean a serious-looking letter from Pokémon's legal team.
«That's not the end of the equation,» he continued. «You don't send a takedown right away. You wait to see if they get funded (for a Kickstarter or similar); if they get funded then that's when you engage. No one likes suing fans.»
McGowan said his work as chief legal officer for Pokémon meant he «ran a team of 20 lawyers and non-lawyer paralegals» at the company's head office in Bellevue, Washington.
His role also entailed managing event security and the brand's customer service team («mostly because I was the department of Things That Can Go Wrong»), meeting with global privacy regulators, and inspecting manufacturing facilities (to make «sure there was no child labour in there, etc.»).
Through his legal work with Legendary Pictures for the Detective Pikachu movie, McGowan also ended up with a producer credit.
In 2022, The Pokémon Company launched a £62m legal bid to take down an obvious and high-profile Chinese rip-off. More recently, the company was forced to comment on the
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