B.C. ‘Hobbit’ house renamed after threat of lawsuit from entertainment company

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BRIDESVILLE, B.C. - The owner of a British Columbia Airbnb property paying tribute to the fantasy race of hobbits from the "Lord of the Rings" has been forced to change the name of her property after being threatened with a lawsuit.

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This article was published 23/05/2021 (1582 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

BRIDESVILLE, B.C. – The owner of a British Columbia Airbnb property paying tribute to the fantasy race of hobbits from the “Lord of the Rings” has been forced to change the name of her property after being threatened with a lawsuit.

Christina Le Comte bought the Hobbit Mountain Hole in 2020 as part of a larger purchase of a ranch in B.C.’s Thompson Okanagan area.

She alleges Warner Bros., the entertainment company that distributed the Hobbit movie series, reached out last week threatening to launch a lawsuit if she didn’t change the name.

A man walks past a sign advertising the theatrical production of the Lord of the Rings in downtown Toronto Wednesday Feb. 8, 2006. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
A man walks past a sign advertising the theatrical production of the Lord of the Rings in downtown Toronto Wednesday Feb. 8, 2006. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Warner Bros. did not immediately return a request for comment.

The property has now been renamed to the Second Breakfast Hideaway, a nod to a Hobbit’s love of meals, and Le Comte hopes that is enough to dissuade the entertainment giant from pursuing legal action.

She says people rent the property to escape from the stress of day-to-day life.

“It really gives people a place to disconnect,” she said in an interview Sunday. “It’s not just people who come here who are huge ‘Lord of the Rings’ fans, it’s people who want to come and have an escape.”

The house is built in to the earth, much like the famous Bag End home in the movie and film series, and features furniture and decorations inspired by the fantasy series.

The property sits on a ranch owned by Le Comte and her husband, with no one else around for several kilometres, which Le Comte says adds to the sense of escape.

But she said once the threat of a lawsuit was found to be genuine, she knew she had to change the name of her rental property.

“There’s no way in the world I can take on these guys,” she said.

Le Comte said she will be reaching out to inform Warner Bros. of the name change in the coming days.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 23, 2021.

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