
Silberstein finally received her trademark on July 7, 2020, and on Janu(the day the new "Ice Age" film was released), she tweeted a photo holding the trademark with the caption "No #Scrat in #Disney #IceAge 6." Silberstein won her 20-year battle for Scrat to be removed from "Ice Age," resulting in his very notable absence in "The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild.

She didn't have any success until 2019, when the Fox-Disney Corporation officially agreed to settle the case. The sixth Ice Age sequel has goofball possum brothers Crash and Eddie. Silberstein spent 18 years battling for the trademark in court and went to various news outlets to try to get the story out about who really created the character. The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild is a dreadfully humorless installment in a CGI franchise that’s long run its course. According to Silberstein, Fox took notice of the character and repurposed it for use in the upcoming animated film "Ice Age" (via Disney Fanatic). Ivy Silberstein (a cartoonist and fashion designer based in New York) claimed to have created "a squirrel-rat hybrid animal" back in 1999.


His absence has to do with the long-running dispute over who actually created Scrat.
