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Entertainment and Sports Law

  • A current dispute over a band name that's worth tracking is one between two founding members of "The Isley Brothers," the legendary r&b group, that focuses on what happens to ownership of the band name rights when one member stops performing with the group but continues to be involved in its business affairs.

    October 01, 2023Stan Soocher
  • Over the past four years, the NCAA aggressively lobbied Congress to pass a uniform NIL standard. Roughly a dozen bills have been sponsored by Democrats and Republicans alike, though none has ever advanced to a vote. Consequently, it appears increasingly likely that the courts will be called upon once again to intervene.

    October 01, 2023Andrew Hope/Michael A. Mora
  • The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia recently upheld a final refusal by the U.S. Copyright Office to register a visual work that was "autonomously created by a computer algorithm running on a machine," which the plaintiff called the Creativity Machine and identified as the "author" of the work.

    October 01, 2023Robert W. Clarida and Thomas Kjellberg
  • Notable court filings in entertainment law.

    October 01, 2023Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • A look at moves among attorneys, law firms, companies and other players in entertainment law.

    October 01, 2023Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • National Conference of Personal Managers Interchange 2023 33rd Annual Entertainment Law Institute

    October 01, 2023Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • Force majeure is lurking in the shadows of the Hollywood strikes, offering struggling studios a potential lifeline out of debt. But the best attorneys and the strongest contracts are proactive, rather than reactive. Thus, consider the following drafting tips to strengthen your force majeure language now, in the calm before the next storm.

    September 01, 2023Michelle Davis
  • This year's update from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service for O-1B visa petitions has knock-on effects for the movie and TV industries. The update has clarified the correct standard of adjudication for an individual with both elements of an O-1B artist and O-1B motion-picture-and-television-industry (MPTV) classification, meaning situations where a foreign national will be working in the U.S. as an artist, but some of their work will be in MPTV.

    September 01, 2023George Ernst
  • Termination is not automatic. It may be effected only through affirmative action on the part of the author or his or her statutory successors, who must serve an advance notice, signed by or on behalf of all of those entitled to terminate the grant, on the current copyright owner within specified time limits and under specified conditions.

    September 01, 2023Thomas Kjellberg and Robert W. Clarida
  • A look at moves among attorneys, law firms, companies and other players in entertainment law.

    September 01, 2023Entertainment Law & Finance Staff