S/O to Forbes Magazine for Keeping it 100 & Real. - TopicsExpress



          

S/O to Forbes Magazine for Keeping it 100 & Real. forbes/sites/oliverherzfeld/2014/01/17/rick-ross-first-amendment-rap/ Excerpt: Rickie Donnell Ross, known as Ricky Ross and Rick Ross, is a former criminal who in the 1980s organized and ran an enormous cocaine-dealing operation. He amassed a fortune in the hundreds of millions of dollars through his illicit empire and, following his arrest, became a famous personality and the subject of many news articles and television shows. English: Photo of the Person described Ricky D... William Leonard Roberts II is a former correctional officer (a fact he denied and tried to hide) who in 2006 commenced a career as a gangster rap musician under the stage name Rick Ross. Roberts became successful and famous by portraying himself as a drug dealing kingpin through songs with lyrics that include many fictional references and stories depicting an imagined life of a crime boss leading a large-scale cocaine operation. Now I understand that the First Amendment protects a product that contains a celebrity’s likeness if it is so transformed that it has become primarily a new expression. I understand that it is common for tribute bands to use names that allude to, and playfully suggest they are not, the originals (e.g., Aerosmisn’t, Faux Fighters, Metalli-Replica, The Not-Quite Stripes and The Second-Rateful Dead). And I understand that Jay-Z and the other founders of the Roc-A-Fella record label were permitted to use that name because no one would mistakenly believe they were actually relatives of John D. Rockefeller. But in this case, Roberts is using the actual name and assuming the actual identity of Ross. The court cited a precedent holding “that First Amendment protection ‘extend[s] to all forms of expression,’ including words (written and spoken) and music.” But should such protection extend to the use of a person’s name and identity by another person? Would another performer be permitted to assume the actual name and identity of Warren Buffett or Bill Gates? Rick Ross It is true that Curtis Jackson III’s stage name, 50 Cent, was derived from the nickname of robber and criminal, Kelvin Martin. However, Martin passed away over 10 years before Jackson’s first official appearance on a song; Jackson never assumed the identity of, or portrayed himself as actually being, Martin; and I am not aware of any claims or objections to Jackson’s name adoption raised by Martin’s estate. The court stated “the economic value of Roberts’ work is reflected to a large extent by the number of CDs and records he sells.” But what if Ross commenced his lawsuit in 2006 at the inception of Roberts’ career as a rapper? Presumably, Ross would have prevailed because, at that time, Roberts sought advancement and success from the use of Ross’ name and identity and had not yet created a body of original artistic works constituting a transformative new expression protected by the First Amendment. If so, what is the implied lesson of the court’s decision? Should aspiring performers be encouraged to appropriate the name and identity of famous personalities in a race to become successful and create a transformative body of work before being sued?
Posted on: Mon, 20 Jan 2014 04:53:13 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015