Ariana Grande might not think retail therapy at Forever 21 is her new addiction.

She is suing Forever 21 for US$10 million over the company using an 鈥渦ncanny鈥 lookalike of her during one of its advertisement campaigns, according to a .

The Grammy-award-winning songstress said the struggling clothing retailer stole her image in a social media advertising campaign after the two couldn鈥檛 come up with an endorsement deal, according to court documents uncovered by .

Forever 21 has denied the allegations in a statement it provided to several media outlets.

The singer claims that Forever 21 representatives reached out to her last year in anticipation of her latest album, 鈥渢hank u next鈥 which dropped in Feb. 2019.

But Grande鈥檚 lawyers assert that despite her popularity, the company didn鈥檛 offer her enough money.

鈥淓ven a single social media post by Ms. Grande can garner fees of several hundred thousand dollars, and her longer-term endorsement arrangements command fees in the millions of dollars,鈥 the lawsuit alleged.

Despite the deal falling through, Grande鈥檚 lawyers allege that Forever 21 then went ahead and used a 鈥渟trikingly similar鈥 model in an ad campaign on its website and social media platforms in late 2018 and early this year.


ONE SOCIAL MEDIA POST FROM GRANDE WORTH SIX FIGURES: HER LAWYER

Besides using a similar-looking model, the lawsuit alleged Forever 21 also imitated colour schemes, iconography and images that bear a strong resemblance to Grande鈥檚 music video for her single 鈥7 Rings.鈥

One screenshot in the lawsuit even shows a Forever 21 Instagram post that quoted the song鈥檚 lyric: 鈥淕ee thanks, just bought it!鈥

The lawsuit claims the company ended up using 鈥渁t least 30 unauthorized images and videos misappropriating Ms. Grande鈥檚 name, image, likeness, and music in order to create the false perception of her endorsement."

Grande side-by-side

(On the left of this composite image is a screenshot of Forever 21's now-deleted social media post; on the right, a screenshot from Ariana Grande's '7 Rings' music video)

In February, Grande鈥檚 lawyers reached out to Forever 21 who agreed to take down all the posts, but some images remained on social media until mid-April, according to the lawsuit.

Although a Forever 21 representative told it doesn鈥檛 comment on pending litigation, it also issued a statement addressing the lawsuit.

鈥淲hile we dispute the allegations, we are huge supporters of Ariana Grande and have worked with her licensing company over the past two years. We are hopeful that we will find a mutually agreeable resolution and can continue to work together in the future,鈥 the statement read.