Ellen Degeneres - Degeneres' Show Sued By Record Company Giants

11 September 2009 08:11
Ellen Degeneres having a dress down Easter Sunday

Picture: Ellen Degeneres having a dress down Easter Sunday. Los Angeles, California, ....

Degeneres' Show Sued By Record Company Giants

Several record label giants have taken aim at ELLEN DEGENERES' daily U.S. talkshow in a new copyright lawsuit - accusing the series' bosses of using popular songs without prior permission.

Record companies including Arista, Capitol Records, Sony and Warner Bros. Records are named as plaintiffs in the suit filed at Nashville's U.S. District Court on Wednesday (09Sep09).

The lawsuit alleges DeGeneres' producers did not obtain licences to play more than 1,000 songs used during the beloved comic's 'dance over' section - where the star strolls to her stage through the audience at the beginning of each show.

When asked why they failed to gain permission to use the songs, defendants for the show allegedly told the companies that they didn't "roll that way".

The suit replies to the statement, saying, "As sophisticated consumers of music, Defendants knew full well that, regardless of the way they rolled, under the Copyright Act, and under state law for the pre-1972 recordings, they needed a license to use the sound recordings lawfully."

According to the suit, the show has used "recordings by virtually every major current artist of popular music," since it began its run in 2003.

A spokesman for Telepicture's Productions, the show's production company, states the series has been trying to come to a solution with the record companies in recent months.

DeGeneres is not targeted personally in the lawsuit, which also sees Motown Records and Atlantic Recording Corp. add their names to the raft of plaintiffs.


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7th August 2010   00:50

Jaylady111 (1)

My understanding as a producer and songwriter is that I get paid when a song is on a TV Show or a radio station. I am sure that ASCAP will know when your song is being played on TV or cable. They should report it. I am getting paid and I didnt know what country was playing my song. I think these young artists need hit songs and development. After all Sony owns amazon and knows who sells and who doesn't. I hit number one on Amazon and I still dont know what I sold and it has been a year. The downloads are tricky because there are no laws protecting artists and writers but for TV and Radio there are.

20th September 2009   08:27

mooseybaby (1)

The record labels are only one part of the equation. I make my living as a songwriter and as a songwriter I can only hope that a t.v. show like Ellen's would use my song and pay for it so that I might be able to feed my family. When I write a song and an artist records it the only way I get paid is if people pay for the right to use it. Believe me, I'm not rich, I just want to work and be paid for my work. I'm sure it is the same for you. Many of you might not be aware of the fact that when a song is played on air the artist receives no payment, only the songwriter and the publisher and record label. Just because you can't hold something in your hand doesn't mean it is not stealing when you take something and use it for your gain and it belongs to someone else. THIS TYPE OF THEFT IS KILLING THE MUSIC INDUSTRY. Shame on you Ellen. Shame on you.

11th September 2009   19:42

shari barrett (1)

Thease people shoulds be ashamed, if anything this young lady is promoting these songs, is jealousy involved? I, should wish you well in these circumstances, and also great news in regards to being a America idol Judge. Thanks

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