I know lines are sometimes lifted from DVD sets if they contain music, but have any lines ever been edited out of shows for other reasons? For instance, if a Walt Disney character's name is mentioned, would that have to be cleared?
Home Theater Forum › Home Theater Forum › Blu-ray, DVD, Streaming Video and Digital Downloads › TV on DVD and Blu-ray › Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Join Now
Be a part of the community.
It's free, join today!
Featured Reviews
-
Rainer Werner Fassbinder had only been making feature films for four years when he tackled the enormous miniseries version of World on a Wire. Filmed in two parts totaling over three and a half...
-
A kind of low budget combination of Jules Dassin’s The Naked City and William Wyler’s Detective Story, Arnold Laven’s Vice Squad offers an entertaining West Coast twist to the police work shown...
-
The Phantom of the Opera gets a great showcase on Blu-ray with this performance at the Royal Albert Hall last October, in honor of its 25th anniversary. Like last year’s Blu-ray of Les...
-
After scoring as an international sensation and winning six 2011 Emmy Awards, Downton Abbey became last season’s most buzzed about new show (curiously, the first season won no major prizes in...
-
Winning the Best Narrative Feature prize at the SXSW Film Festival and being called “the next Woody Allen” must be heady stuff indeed for young filmmaker Lena Dunham. In Tiny Furniture, she...
Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
post #2 of 9
4/20/08 at 9:22pm
- Yee-Ming
- Yee Ming Lim
- Location: 'on a little street in Singapore'
- offline
- Joined: April 2002
- Posts: 4,176
- Select All Posts By This User
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Elena S
I know lines are sometimes lifted from DVD sets if they contain music, but have any lines ever been edited out of shows for other reasons? For instance, if a Walt Disney character's name is mentioned, would that have to be cleared?
|
Off the top of my head, unlikely. It's hard to claim copyright in just a line, or just a name. To follow from your example, if the name "Mickey Mouse" is mentioned, that's not likely to be copyright infringement since there's probably no copyright in the name itself, being too short to be considered an 'artistic expression of an idea'. "Mickey Mouse" is no doubt trademarked to death covering all sort of goods and services, but the use you've described (i.e. someone saying the name in another movie) would not be use in the trademark sense, i.e. used on goods, or in relation to services being provided.
That's not to say Disney (more accurately it's anal-retentive lawyers) won't kick up a fuss, though....
post #3 of 9
4/21/08 at 5:24am
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
I know of one instance: On Red Dwarf: Series 2 in the episode "Kryten", Rimmer utters the line "she has less meat on her than a Chicken McNugget." In order to avoid any potential complaint from McDonald's lawyers (though none was anticipated), BBC Worldwide decided to silence the "Mc" from the sountrack, so on the DVD, it sounds like Rimmer says "chicken nugget." The episode, by the way, was issued in its original unaltered form on VHS years ago.
post #4 of 9
4/21/08 at 10:54am
- MatthewA
- Matthew
-
- Location: Monterey, CA
- offline
- Joined: April 2000
- Posts: 5,114
- Reviews: 32
- Select All Posts By This User
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
On the Columbia House VHS tapes of Soap, one of the last episodes has Jessica and Mary talking about Cosmopolitan magazine, and the name of the magazine is in reverse audio.
post #5 of 9
4/22/08 at 12:43pm
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
I can think of another one - in one of the earlier seasons of Absolutely Fabulous, Edina is in the kitchen late at night talking to (I think) Saffy. \She quoted a line from a Madonna song (I think it was "Like a Prayer") and it was cut from the DVD release (at least in Region 1).
post #6 of 9
4/22/08 at 2:20pm
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Product names are a whole different issue than "copyright" or trademark more broadly considered. There are several problems with using real product names on TV, whether as props, in signage or in dialogue.:1) Companies like to control their image. Budweiser probably does not want its beer being guzzled by a stagggering, half-naked Charlie Harper on Three-and-a-Half Men.
2) Competitors don't like it when brand "A" is featured in the show their commercials for brand "B" is running on. That's why there is usually some "promotional consideration" involved in getting a real product on a show. Such placement is, in effect, an advertisement, so it actually levels the playing field if the company doing it pays a fee just like any other advertiser. And in some cases the deal includes only running ads for that brand during the commercial breaks. The old FBI series on ABC TV was sponsored, in part, by a car company. (Let's say it was Ford, although my memory isn't really that good.
3) Whatever the case may have been in first-run broadcast, odds are nobody's still collecting promotional fees by the time a show hits home video or syndication, and nobody knows what competitor to a given product might be running ads on a local channel or in a local cable market, so it is easier all around to remove such references as there are.
Quote:
| She quoted a line from a Madonna song (I think it was "Like a Prayer") and it was cut from the DVD release (at least in Region 1). |
Song lyrics are no different than actual recordings when it comes to music rights. In fact, it is often whoever holds the publishing rights, not the recording artist or record label, who is the biggest stumbling block to music clearances. And composers and lyricists have equal rights (and equal vetoes) when it comes to the use of their songs. So the quotation may have been cleared for broadcast use, but not for DVD. More likely it wasn't cleared for broadcast because somebody slipped up or thought there would be no problem if the lyric were spoken, and they had to pay-up after the fact when they heard from the song-ower's lawyers. Then they either decided not to bother with the issue or balked at the price when it came time to clear the line for DVD. (The other possibility is that British copyright law is different than U.S. law in this respect, and there was no problem using the spoken line on the other side of The Pond, but would have been here.)
Regards,
Joe
post #7 of 9
4/25/08 at 12:38pm
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Sure, lines and scenes are edited out later for a variety of reasons, but it's not the same issue as music clearance rights.The issue with music is that everybody knows that money is owed, but depending on how the rights were purchased back when the show was first produced (i.e. for what media, which regions, and for how long), the rights may have to be repurchased for home video, with no guidelines as to the price demanded.
You don't have to buy the rights to say the words "Mickey Mouse" or "Budweiser." But you have to clear those copyrighted names through the legal department, because if those references are judged by Disney or Anheuser-Busch to be disparaging, these companies can sue. Even if the legal department decides the usage is fair, many production companies will delete the reference anyway, because they don't want to chance a lawsuit which will be expensive even if they win it. And yes, there's insurance for this sort of thing, but the deductibles are not cheap.
(This is all separate from paid product placement or the "monetizing" of brand placement into a show. This must be negotiated weeks in advance, and can come at the expense of other advertisers unwilling to place commercials on a show.)
There's no reason that one should have to renegotiate anything to get to say those same copyrighted names on home video. The reason they are sometimes deleted is because a lawsuit was threatened at the time of the original airing, or a new legal department is more cautious, or the company named has become more litigious. Occasionally, the legal department may simply have failed to notice the usage the first time around. And so, the reference is deleted.
But this is a completely different scenario from the deletion of music and/or lyrics.
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Mike*SC
this is a completely different scenario from the deletion of music and/or lyrics.
|
post #9 of 9
4/27/08 at 12:23am
Re: Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Elena S
Maybe so, but it still renders a set incomplete.
|
Return Home
Back to Forum: TV on DVD and Blu-ray
Home Theater Forum › Home Theater Forum › Blu-ray, DVD, Streaming Video and Digital Downloads › TV on DVD and Blu-ray › Are lines ever edited out because of copyright?
Currently, there are 1458 Active Users
(137 Members and 1321 Guests)
Recent Discussions
- › WHV Announcement: The Wizard of Oz 2012-2013 Moratorium 2 minutes ago
- › MGM MOD: Fox Bows On Demand MGM Movies for Retailers 8 minutes ago
- › 2 channel receiver for my living room 12 minutes ago
- › Parenthood - Season 3 thread 27 minutes ago
- › Star Trek: The Next Generation - Next Level Blu-ray Review 33 minutes ago
- › Star Trek Trivia (Series and Films) 34 minutes ago
- › The official Star Wars The Complete Saga Blu-ray discussion thread 38 minutes ago
- › What are you listening to right now? 40 minutes ago
- › Where's "Battle of the Network Stars"?? 48 minutes ago
- › Ringer Season 1 (CW) 49 minutes ago
View: New Posts | All Discussions
Recent Reviews
- › World on a Wire (Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] by MattH.
- › Vice Squad (MGM/MOD) by MattH.
- › Logitech 915-000144 Harmony Link - Black by Ronald Epstein
- › Love Story [Blu-ray] by MatthewA
- › The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall [Blu-ray] by Kevin EK
- › Downton Abbey: Season 2 (Original U.K. Edition) [Blu-ray] by MattH.
- › Tiny Furniture (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] by MattH.
- › Three Outlaw Samurai (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] by MattH.
- › Rebound [Blu-ray] by MattH.
- › From Dusk Till Dawn 4 Film Collection [Blu-ray] by Toddwrtr
View: More Reviews
Recent Articles
- › HTF AWARDS 2011 by Ronald Epstein
- › 2012 Home Theater Forum Meet Information by Ronald Epstein
- › HTF Official Blu Ray Review Archive Part 2 by Ronald Epstein
- › Robert Fowkes, HTF Moderator, 1942-2011 by Ronald Epstein
- › Blu-ray Previously Released Listing: #-D by Robert Crawford
- › Blu-ray Previously Released Listing: E-I by Robert Crawford
- › Blu-ray Previously Released Listing: J-P by Robert Crawford
- › Blu-ray Previously Released Listing: Q-T by Robert Crawford
- › Blu-ray Previously Released Listing: U-Z by Robert Crawford
- › Interview With Director Simon Wells About... by Adam Gregorich
View: Recent Articles | All Articles
Home | Home Theater Gear, Movies & More | Forums | Articles | My Profile
About Home Theater Forum | Join the Community | HTF Chat | HTF Events | Advertise
© 2012 Home Theater Forum is powered by Huddler Tech | FAQ | Support | Privacy/TOS | Site Map
About Home Theater Forum | Join the Community | HTF Chat | HTF Events | Advertise
© 2012 Home Theater Forum is powered by Huddler Tech | FAQ | Support | Privacy/TOS | Site Map





