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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

December 09th, 2008 | argument, Art & Money, art law, copyright and fair use, Creative Legal Events, fun, legal interpretation, legal madness, legal writing, Uncategorized | Add your comment

Sorry, but your political enemies can use your copyrighted works (as long as their use is fair use).

Many people believe that an artist’s rights in her work include the right to prevent the use of the work on behalf of causes and beliefs she does not believe in. That may be true in Europe; it is not true in the U.S., provided that the use the artist is trying to deny does not exploit the markets created by the original work. In other words, politicians with whom singers disagree may well have the right to use excerpts from those singers’ songs. And the producers of movies that advance views with which the singers take strong exception may not have any worry as long as they are using the songs they are using aren’t being used merely to attract an audience to the movie by use of the song.

Times Higher Education explains the difference between European and Anglo-American law:

The later European view of copyright regarded a published work as the author’s offspring as much as his property, endowing him with inalienable moral as well as tradeable commercial rights. The Anglo-American tradition in copyright, which is based firmly in the notion of property and income, resisted this concept.

Thus, in June, a federal court in New York City denied Yoko Ono’s request for an injunction against further showing and distribution of the movie Expelled, which, as I have previously written, criticizes evolution, promotes the teaching of intelligent design, and, in the process, uses 15 seconds of John Lennon’s song “Imagine.”

As I wrote when Ono’s lawsuit was first filed, If the filmmakers had tried merely “to capitalize on the film as soundtrack material that would be attractive to an audience would likely not be fair use, but, if, as seems likely, the song is quoted to criticize its atheism, that use would likely constitute fair use, regardless of whether Ono finds the users’ message objectionable.” The court, apparently, thought similar things (citations and footnotes omitted; hyperlink added):

Defendants’ use is transformative because the movie incorporates an excerpt of Imagine for purposes of criticism and commentary. The filmmakers selected two lines of the song that they believe envision a world without religion: “Nothing to kill or die for/ And no religion too.” (“Imagine” lyrics) As one of the producers of “Expelled” explains, the filmmakers paired these lyrics and the accompanying music to a sequence of images that “provide a layered criticism and commentary of the song.” The Cold War-era images of marching soldiers, followed by the image of Stalin, express the filmmakers’ view that the song’s secular utopian vision “cannot be maintained without realization in a politicized form” and that the form it will ultimately take is dictatorship. The movie thus uses the excerpt of “Imagine” to criticize what the filmmakers see as the naïveté of John Lennon’s views. The excerpt’s location within the movie supports defendants’ assertions. It appears immediately after several scenes of speakers criticizing the role of religion in public life. In his voiceover, Ben Stein then connects these sentiments to the song by stating that they are merely “a page out of John Lennon’s songbook.” In defendants’ view, “Imagine” is a secular anthem caught in a loop of history recycling the same arguments from years past through to the present. We remind our audience that the ideas they just heard expressed from modern interviews and clips that religion is bad are not and have been tried before with disastrous results.”  The filmmakers “purposefully positioned the clip . . . between interviews of those who suggest that the world would be better off without religion and an interview suggesting that religion’s commitment to transcendental values place limits on human behavior. . . . mak[ing] the point that societies that permit Darwinism to trump all other authorities, including religion, pose a greater threat to human values than religious belief.”

Defendants’ use of “Imagine” is similar to the use at issue in a recent decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in which fair use was found, Blanch v. Koons. There, the visual artist Jeff Koons copied photographer Andrea Blanch’s photograph from a fashion magazine without permission and incorporated a portion of it into one of his paintings.  . . . As in Blanch, defendants here use a portion of “Imagine” as “fodder” for social commentary, altering it to further their distinct purpose. Just as Koons placed a portion of Blanch’s photograph against a new background, defendants here play the excerpt of the song over carefully selected archival footage that implicitly comments on the song’s lyrics. They also pair the excerpt of the song with the views of contemporary defenders of the theory of evolution and juxtapose it with an interview regarding the importance of transcendental values in public life. Plaintiffs contend that defendants’ use of “Imagine” is not transformative because defendants did not alter the song, but simply “cut and paste[d]” it into “Expelled.” As the foregoing discussion illustrates, however, this argument draws the transformative use inquiry too narrowly. To be transformative, it is not necessary that defendants alter the music or lyrics of the song. Indeed, defendants assert that the recognizability of “Imagine” is important to their use of it.  Defendants’ use is nonetheless transformative because they put the song to a different purpose, selected an excerpt containing the ideas they wished to critique, paired the music and lyrics with images that contrast with the song’s utopian expression, and placed the excerpt in the context of a debate regarding the role of religion in public life. Plaintiffs also contend that defendants’ use of “Imagine” is not transformative because it was unnecessary to use it in order to further the purposes defendants have articulated.

Determining whether a use is transformative, however, does not require courts to to decide whether it was strictly necessary that it be used. In Blanch, although certainly Koons did not need to use Blanch’s copyrighted photo, as opposed to some other image of a woman’s feet, in his painting, the Second Circuit did not suggest that this lack of necessity weighed against a finding of fair use. Similarly, in Bill Graham Archives, the Second Circuit found a transformative use in the defendants’ unauthorized inclusion of several of the plaintiff’s images-principally concert photos-in a coffee-table book about the musical group the Grateful Dead.  Although the defendants manifestly could have proceeded without the plaintiff’s , which constituted only a small part of the book, this posed no obstacle to a finding of fair use.

As I said, I think the use of “Imagine” by the filmmakers without permission is legitimate fair use. Nonetheless, Lennon, and “Imagine” in particular, are being misrepresented. Lennon’s song imagines a world unpolluted by religious sectarianism, not exactly a radical view in light of the issues of the day. But that’s not a view many can find tolerable, even in the U.S. of 2008, and they’ll resort to misrepresentation to support their intolerance.  One day after the decision against Ono, the Wall Street Journal ran a story with the headline The Case Against John Lennon.  The quote that highlights the column?

Nothing to live or die for — what a nightmare.

Mike Thomas points out that the line is “Nothing to kill or die for” and asks:

What is going on here? Why is the WSJ promoting a column with such a provacative title and using a misquote to mislead readers into a negative reaction against John Lennon? The column itself is a mess. It is poorly written, jumbled and fails to adequately explain how John Lennon or his song “Imagine” has anything to do with what the column appears to be about. Here is the pertinent section that mentions Lennon:

“Mr. Sharansky has a new book, titled Defending Identity. It would be equally accurate to call it The Case Against John Lennon. Or, more specifically, the case against ‘Imagine,’ Lennon’s anthem to a world with ‘no countries . . . nothing to kill or die for/And no religion too.’ For Mr. Sharansky, a nine-year resident of the Perm 35 prison camp, that’s a vision that smacks too much of the professed beliefs of the ex-Beatle’s near namesake, Vladimir Ilyich.’

What the hell? Does he think he’s being clever or something? Lennon sounds like Lenin. Get it? So obviously they must be related or they must think alike or something right? Nevermind that “Lenin” was actually an alias for Vladimir Illich Ulyanov, while the surname Lennon dates back hundreds of years to old Ireland.

No, they sound alike so there must be a connection. Right? Kind of like how Obama sounds like Osama so they must be related too. Yeah. That’s the level of reasoning that the column sinks to.

Absolutely pathetic.

And of course he never goes back and explains how V.I. Lenin’s brutal and dictatorial ways have any similarity or correlation to Lennon’s ode to world peace. But fortunately for the cretins who run the WSJ editorial pages, John Lennon is dead and can’t defend his classic work against their asinine columnist’s offhanded smear.

Here’s Ken Miller, a biologist from my alma mater speaking at Case Western Reserve University, from which I am currently on leave, speaking on intellligent design, evolution, and religion:

November 20th, 2008 | copyright and fair use | Add your comment

I dont know how to tell you all just how crazy this life feels

From MSNBC:

John McCain may have lost the presidential election to Barack Obama, but his campaign seems absolutely determined not to lose to Jackson Browne. The singer/songwriter sued McCain in August after the Republican candidate for the highest office in the land used his song, “Running on Empty,” in a campaign commercial that targeted Obama’s energy plan. . . .

McCain, of course, is arguing that his use of the song was fair use, not copyright infringement (hyperlinks added):

The campaign’s fair use reading is based on the application of the standard four-factor test that includes the purpose and character of the use of the song (McCain argues it was non-commercial and transformative); the nature of the work (McCain derides the song as old, old, old, with a title that’s an acknowledged cliche); the amount and substantiality of the use of the song (McCain only used the title phrase, and cites a recent judgment against Yoko Ono, who had sought to prevent the unauthorized use of John Lennon’s “Imagine” in a film); and the effect of the use of the song (McCain says that rather than damage the song’s commercial potential, his use “will likely increase the popularity of this thirty year-old song”).

In some ways, the case is reminiscent of Master Card v. Nader 2000 Campaign Committee, in which the court dismissed Mastercard’s lawsuit against Ralph Nader’s 2000 Presidential Campaign Committee. Mastercard’s lawsuit alleged, among other things, that a Nader campaign add that borrowed heavily from Mastercard’s “priceless moments” television ads infringed on Mastercard’s copyright in those ads. The court concluded:

The Nader Ad does add something new and qualifies as a “transformative” work. Whether it “comments” on the original is the issue in question. MasterCard’s message depicted in its Priceless Advertisements is very plain and straightforward. In a series of advertisements, MasterCard presents various intangible moments that are highly valuable, yet unable to be “purchased” or are “priceless.” Hence, “there are some things that money can’t buy.”

This idea is followed by the message, that the viewer-consumer can purchase everything else with their MasterCard credit card–”for everything else, there’s MasterCard.” Ralph Nader’s Political Ad attempts to show various ways different Presidential candidates can be bought in the “big-money arena of Presidential politics” and contrasts the “priceless” truth represented by Ralph Nader as the remedy for the bought and paid for positions of others. Through this depiction, Ralph Nader argues that he not only sends across his own message, but that he wittingly comments on the craft of the original, “which cloaks its materialistic message in warm, sugar-coated imagery that purports to elevate intangible values over the monetary values it in fact hawks.” This commentary “may reasonably be perceived.” The message need not be popular nor agreed with. It may be subtle rather than obvious. It need only be reasonably perceived. Ralph Nader’s Political Ad is sufficiently a parody for the purposes of a fair use analysis, and consequently, is transformative.

William Patry, Google’s Senior Copyright Counsel, opines on typically futile efforts to use copyright to quell political speech here. There is a long history of this type of thing, as I’ve mentioned here and as you can see in the videos below, none of which was successfully blocked by the owners of the copyrighted works being used: