Shownotes
Most creators try to be responsible when choosing a podcast or YouTube channel name.
They Google it.
They search podcast platforms.
Some even check the USPTO trademark database.
If nothing obvious appears, they assume they’re safe.
In this episode of Legit Podcast Pro, Gordon Firemark explains why that assumption can create a false sense of security—and why trademark conflicts often live outside the places creators look.
Trademark law in the United States generally favors first use in commerce. But identifying potential conflicts requires more than checking for identical matches. Similar sounding names, related industries, future expansion plans, and pending applications can all create risk that surface-level searches won’t reveal.
This episode breaks down how smart creators still miss hidden conflicts—and why those conflicts usually appear after the show has gained traction, not at launch.
In This Episode
- Why Google searches don’t reveal trademark rights
- The difference between identical names and confusingly similar marks
- Why searching the USPTO database isn’t the same as evaluating risk
- How brand expansion (merch, courses, events) increases exposure
- When trademark conflicts most commonly surface
- Why the real cost of getting this wrong is rebuilding momentum
If you’re serious about building an asset-driven business around your podcast or channel, guessing isn’t a strategy.
Next Step
If you’d like clarity about your show name—what’s clear, what’s exposed, and what your options are—you can set up a trademark strategy call here:
https://gpf.link/tmcall
Every situation is different. This conversation is about understanding your specific risk profile before you invest more time and energy into your brand.