Glamour Dolls failed to comply with those obligations when it engaged in a failed online advertising campaign on Kickstarter, using LFI, Lisa Frank's brand without LFI's approval and then refused to pay royalties due when LFI properly terminated the party's contracts as a result of Glamour Dolls' misconduct. Wait a minute. She didn't know about the Kickstarter? Hello my friend, I will honestly tell you that until late last night, I did not think that I was filming a video about Lisa Frank and Glamour Dolls today. I actually had a full video planned about preservative-free cosmetics and how freaking ridiculous and dangerous preservative-free cosmetics are. But then I got a very interesting comment from a person named "Fake Goth Girl." Okay. I get a link. The link is to a court document that I had not previously had access to. This document is Lisa Frank's point of view. It is her counter suit. This is Lisa Frank saying "Glamour Dolls is the bad guy, not me. I didn't do anything wrong - they're the ones that did something wrong." So in today's video, I want to go over Lisa's side of things - what she says in the court documents is the reason why she pulled out of her contract with Glamour Dolls that left backers of the Kickstarter out all of their money - over $400,000 of their money, including my money. My $75? Gone. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, that's because this is Part 2. I strongly strongly suggest you please watch Part 1 of this. It will be linked below. It will be up in a card. It is the background for this video - this video might not make sense if you don't watch that one first. If you don't feel like you have time for an hour and a half long video, what you can do is you can scrub through the timestamps, kind of get the idea of what it is. You can also play it on 1.5 speed if you want to. And I will tell you that the average amount of watch time on that video for a single view is about 40 minutes. That has literally never happened on my channel. This is a story that I think you want to hear and and that I think that you are going to be engaged in if you choose to. That being said, we are starting at Part 2. I'm assuming at this point that you have seen that video and that you have that background knowledge. And also, side note, I mentioned this at the end of the video, but there's probably about 40 comments mentioning Bailey Sarian's video on Lisa Frank, based on the Jezebel article that we talked about in the first part of this. Yes, I am fully aware of Bailey's video. I have met Bailey. I have collaborated with Bailey. Bailey did a fantastic job on that video. That video is more about Lisa Frank as a person, so if you want even more context for the story, I highly recommend you go watch Bailey's video as well. What we're gonna do with this part is I'm actually gonna put Lisa Frank's lawsuit on the side of me so if you are fluent in Legalese, you can follow along and see the match up of what I'm saying. Surprisingly, a lot of is is pretty clear cut and there isn't a ton of lawyer language in this that was difficult to understand. So if you would like to read along, it is going to be next to me over here. Here we go. So this is what Lisa says. This is her side of things. This is all about the deal in 2016, the original deal that she had. Lisa says they struck the deal in June of 2016 that would end on December 31st of 2017 - that matches up with Glamour Dolls' side, so I'm assuming there's legal contracts, so there's evidence of this. So Glamour Dolls in that original contract, agreed to pay Lisa Frank 15% royalty on the net sales of the products made under the deal, with a minimum payment of $100,000 for the duration of the agreement, including a $25,000 advance. Glamour Dolls promised to do their best, to make, sell, promote, and market the products to get as many sales as possible, always focusing on high quality. Now this part is very very important because this is really the root of why everything went wrong. They had to get Lisa Frank's approval on literally everything, from the design concepts to the artwork, to the molds for production, to the final product samples before going into production. Lisa Frank had the right to approve or reject the elements and Glamour Dolls had to follow Lisa Frank's directions on quality standards. Now listen to this because this is part of the reason why things were taking so long. So, for designs, Glamour Dolls had to wait up to 10 business days - that's about two weeks or so - for Lisa Frank to approve or reject anything that they submitted to her. If Lisa didn't respond in time, Glamour Dolls was allowed to ask after those 10 business days, "Hey, what's going on? I need a full description of why you reject this or I need an approval." But this is the kicker! Because even after approval, and remember, this is according to Lisa herself,