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Children and Heirs of Deceased Pop Stars Urge House Judiciary Committee to Pass American Music Fairness Act

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This letter was read into the Congressional Record yesterday. It’s from the children of deceased R&B stars regarding the failure of pop radio conglomerates to pay royalties to their parents’ estates, and to all performers who are not paid for their records being played on the radio.

Seventy or more years into the life of classic pop, rock, R&B, country music etc no performers are paid when their hits are played on the radio. The writers of the songs are paid publishing royalties. But the singers and musicians get nothing. Every “oldies” station you love is essentially taking advantage of all the people on those records, whether it’s Johnny Cash, the Motown stars, crooners like Sinatra and Tony Bennett, or heavy metal groups. No one.

The letter was sent to Rep. Jerry Nadler, head of the House Judiciary Committee, in support of the American Music Fairness Act. It’s signed by the relatives/children/rights holders/heirs to Nat King Cole, Natalie Cole, Issac Hayes, Clyde McPhatter, Dave Prater Jr. Billy Preston, Otis Redding, David Ruffin, Mary Wells, Jackie Wilson, Mary Wilson and niece of Bobby Womack together with John
Edwards
, disabled former lead singer of The Spinners. As you’ll see in the letter, living artist Sam Moore of Sam & Dave and his wife, Joyce Moore, are offering to help in the compensation through their Soul Arts & Music Foundation.

The signers of the letter urge that it’s time to get this bill passed. It’s already 70 years late.

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We the children/relatives/rights holders of the deceased legacy artists Nat King Cole, Natalie
Cole, Issac Hayes, Clyde McPhatter, Dave PraterJr. Billy Preston, Otis Redding, David Ruffin,
Mary Wells, Jackie Wilson, Mary Wilson and niece of Bobby Womack together with John
Edwards, disabled former lead singer of The Spinners, offer our collective testimony to The
Members of The United States House of Representatives Judiciary Committee IN SUPPORT OF
THE AMERICAN MUSIC FAIRNESS ACT

February 7, 2022

Chairman Jerrold Nadler and

The House Judiciary Committee Members

House Judiciary Committee Office

2138 Rayburn House Office Building

Washington, DC 20515

RE:
THE AMERICAN MUSIC FAIRNESS ACT

Dear Chairman Nadler and All of The House Judiciary Committee Members:
Thank you so much for holding a hearing last week, February 2, 2022, to discuss and consider
the plight of the American recording artist, regardless of their genres, who have contributed so
much for so long to our country and world culture.

It’s untenable that when a song is played on an AM/FM station, only the writer of the song is
paid not anyone else involved in creating the sound recordings they broadcast are
compensated. This lack of payment to the talent, the creators is due to an oversight that created
a loophole that Congress has allowed to exist since the phonograph recording was invented
together with a method to broadcast over the airwaves, the live performances embedded on them
80 or so years ago.


The question of how or why this “loophole” could have happened was asked a few times during
the hearing Wednesday morning. It came to be because whoever first walked into a radio station
with a recorded disc and a suitable method of playing it, made possible by the invention of the
victrola, making it possible to be heard with sufficient quality to be transmitted over the
airwaves, neglected or just didn’t know that they needed to come to Congress first. The
copyright laws needed to have been amended then to include, to embrace The Creators, the
artists, musicians, backing vocalists, producer(s) and engineer(s) with broadcast performances
compensation. Up until that time, radio stations would bring the big bands, The Glenn Miller‘s,
The Paul Whiteman Orchestra, Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians, Ella Fitzgerald, The
Andrew Sisters, Count Basie and Duke Ellington to name a few into their cavernous radio
studios to perform live on the air” from their studio(s). All the talent were paid for those one
off broadcast performances. It should be noted that at that time, the stations could not prerecord
or record performances to rebroadcast them because the technology had not yet been satisfactory
to do so.

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Having this knowledge should make it easy to understand how the recorded disc suddenly and
immediately changed the landscape and how and why the artists suddenly became dispensable.

When you couple that with the failure to come to Congress and that for decades and decades
local radio was the media that every Congressional member had to rely on to get their message
out to their constituents, especially during election and reelection time. That created quite a
serious negotiating tool in the hands of the radio station owner members of the NAB available
to use for decades. To be blunt, it’s been pretty easy for the NAB to block and refuse to
cooperate with making any modifications to the Copyright Act to correct the unfair exploitation
by the station owners of the artist group over all these decades.


“The Loophole and the leverage has been up until now impenetrable.


It’s no secret that the AM and FM (Terrestrial Radio Stations), now primarily owned by large
corporations, earn billions of dollars from the advertising revenues broadcasting the live
recorded performances of our relatives, that were captured when they stood live, in front of a
microphone in a studio to create those sound recordings. It’s incomprehensible that not one
broadcast of those live captured performances of our parents, siblings and relatives or for that
matter any and all of the other artist who ever recorded their live performances on sound
recordings have never been compensated for those broadcast performances.


The American Music Fairness Act would finally require the Terrestrial Radio Stations to
compensate all American artists for their performances, their talent, their essence, their souls
embodied on the sound recordings. The passage would also open the doors so all recording
artists, regardless of their country of origin would be compensated and in so doing opens the
floodgates to the millions and millions and millions of dollars the American recording artists
have been unable to collect all of these years because there has been no reciprocity.
The overseas
compensation
should be literally lifechanging for so many artists and their families.


AM/FM radio stations are the only media that does not compensate artists for their musical
performances. AM/FM radio is
the only industry group that feels it can take intellectual property
created by others and simply use it for their personal pecuniary gain without
permission or
compensating
the creators. It is decades long overdue for the Terrestrial Radio Stations to stop
their practice of
using the artists talents like their property reminiscent of their being their
indentured servants
, lacking in rights and respect.
Let us also be clear, we are more than mildly alarmed and disappointed that many of you have
cosponsored or signed on in support of the NAB’s LRFA.

Our opposition to LRFA is based on several reasons because their resolution and bill reinforces
the continued practice of using our family members and their peers, by exploiting, without
compensation, all American recording artists.

Quite frankly
, it makes it more offensive to us that you would continue to allow the use of the
talents of our
parents and other family members, all of whom are black legacy recording artist.

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For us, to hear the NAB claim that passage of a bill that finally would compensate hundreds if
not thousands of black artists would somehow put small minority owned radio stations that
couldn’t afford $500 a year out of business, thereby devastating low income communities where
black and Latino reside is intolerable.

Congressman Darrell Issa, during the hearing, made it very clear that Sam Moore and his wife
Joyce, through the 501(c)(3) charitable foundation, The Soul Arts And Music Foundation, would
pay for any of those $10, $100 or $500 only annual fees of the designated small or small local
neighborhood FCC licensed radio stations that earn not more than $1,500,000 annually or less.
Any of those specific designated stations that could not pay some or all of those $10, $100 or
$500 amounts can be covered through an application through a hardship grants program that
would be immediately implemented at the Foundation. Sam and Joyce Moore have indicated
that, if it’s necessary that commitment could be written into the actual bill language for a period
of the first two years forward of the passage
of the American Music Fairness Act with an annual
re
evaluation by The Foundation to continue the program. They believe that a twoyear
assistance program
window should be more than sufficient incentive to the radio stations.

It feels like we have to remind everyone that all of our parents and our relatives and most of their
peers began their careers during the height of segregation and The Jim Crow Era which
represented a time in our country where treating blacks as secondclass people without any of the
rights they were to be endowed with as Americans because in those days segregation was
unfortunately the norm in society. While those policies thanks to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
(himself a vocal performing recording artist whose estate has also never been compensated for
the broadcasts of his recorded speeches), do not exist anymore except perhaps i where the last
vestige of it seems alive and well in reality and the mentality of Terrestrial Radio.

Our moms and dads faced incredible discriminatory barriers, yet, they persevered, produced an
amazing body of creative musical artistry that remains cherished to this day by all Americans
and the world. Sadly, a
world that collects but does not pay over the compensation they collect
that
is not distributed to our families because there is no reciprocity, because of “the loophole”.
Congress has
failed for decades to correct the wrong by never passing a broadcast performance
right for the broadcast of our parents live
performances that were captured on tape and turned
into sound recordings.


It wasn’t made clear enough during the hearing or above in this letter, that the monies, the
hundreds of millions of dollars collected annually in the name of every single American
recording artist, including our parents, around the rest of the world and captured on a countryby
country collection society basis, eventually gets reinvested into those individual countries’ arts
and cultural programs. In other words, our parents, all of their peers and every American
recording artist is actually paying to foster and support The Arts including educating the children
of those countries about their cultural history.


On the other side of th
at coin, many of us have lived hard. An example Stacy Womack
Henderson’s little sister
Sugar was four (4) years old when their mom, Mary Wells passed away
in 1991.
Stacy, in her early 20’s took custody of Sugar. At the time, Stacy was living in a one

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Thanking you in advance for your consideration and cooperation in making our request reality.

Authorized 2 signature pages of the adult children/relatives/rights holders of Nat King
Cole, the sisters of, Natalie Cole, Issac Hayes, Clyde McPhatter, Dave Prater Jr. Billy Preston,
Otis Redding, David Ruffin, Mary Wells, Jackie Wilson, Mary Wilson, Cecil Womack and niece
of Bobby Womack together with John Edwards, Sam and Joyce Moore are annexed and attached
hereto.

Spotify Canceled: David Crosby Says He’s Gotten Record Label and Owner of Catalog to Remove All His Music

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Singer songwriter David Crosby joined Neil Young and Joni Mitchell in wanting his music off Spotify.

But Crosby had sold the rights to his catalog and didn’t have control over his music. He lamented that but said he stood with his friends. Graham Nash and Stephen Stills did the same thing. They, and India Arie, have spoken out against Spotify because of the Joe Rogan podcast that is anti-science.

Now Crosby says his record company BMG and Iconic Music have agreed to pull all his music from the streaming service.

“I am proud of both of them,” he writes, “they did not have to do that.”

Bob Saget Family Says He Died from a Brain Bleed After Hitting Head, Not a Heart Attack

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We all surmised Bob Saget died from a heart attack. But that was not the case. His family has issued a statement after TMZ somehow got the official report.

Saget died from head trauma. He somehow hit his head in the hotel room and didn’t do anything about it. He went to sleep and had a brain bleed. This is a terrifying reminder that if you hit your head you must see a doctor immediately. Natasha Richardson died similarly. So did Camilla Parker Bowles’s brother, Mark Shand.

What a tragic accident. Condolences again to his family and friends.

Here’s the family statement:

“Now that we have the final conclusions from the authorities’ investigation, we felt it only proper that the fans hear those conclusions directly from us. The authorities have determined that Bob passed away from head trauma. They have concluded that he accidentally hit the back of his head on something, thought nothing of it and went to sleep. No drugs or alcohol were involved.”

“As we continue to mourn together, we ask everyone to remember the love and laughter that Bob brought to this world, and the lessons he taught us all: to be kind to everyone, to let the people you love know you love them, and to face difficult times with hugs and laughter.”

Marjorie Taylor Greene Attacks “Gazpacho Police”: Woman on Verge of Nervous Breakdown

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Yes, the idiotic congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene is a woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

She calls out Nancy Pelosi’s “Gazpacho Police” in the clip below. She meant “Gestapo Police” although not really since the Gestapo was Hitler’s police.

She’s redundant. But we knew that.

Gazpacho figures in the plot of Pedro Almodovar’s beloved film, “Woman on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.”

Also, my Dad loved it.

Movie Academy Adds Governors Awards to Oscar Weekend, Honoring Sam Jackson, Elaine May, Liv Ullmann, and Danny Glover

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The Motion Picture Academy has great news.

The postponed Governor’s Awards will kick off Oscar weekend on March 25th. The awards– Lifetime honors– will go to Samuel L. Jackson, Liv Ullmann, Elaine May, and Danny Glover. Glover will get the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.

Jennifer Fox is producing the scaled back event at the Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland in Hollywood.

This is the perfect solution to when to have this dinner. And maybe it will become a tradition. The Honorary Award, an Oscar statuette, is given “to honor extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement, exceptional contributions to the state of motion picture arts and sciences, or for outstanding service to the Academy.”

The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, also an Oscar statuette, is given “to an individual in the motion picture arts and sciences whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry.”

 

The Oscars air March 27th on ABC.

Oscar Nominations Send Fans to Theaters: Tuesday Night Box Office Up, Up, Up

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Yesterday’s announcements of Oscar nominations was just the medicine the box office needed. Fans went to theaters last night. The Oscars carry clout.

For example: “Belfast” doubled its Monday night numbers and made $44,000. That’s a 100% difference.  “Licorice Pizza” went up 64%. West Side Story” rose 63%. “Dune” went up 66%. “King Richard” jumped 54%.

Even “Parallel Mothers” rose to $1.3 million based on moviegoers now wanting to see Penelope Cruz give her best performance ever in a great Pedro Almodovar film.

Of course, we don’ t know if more people watched the nominated Netflix, Amazon, or Apple movies. But my guess is they did. And they probably wondered why Nina Arianda wasn’t nominated for “Being the Ricardos” and why “Tick Tick Boom” didn’t have the spot that went to “Dont Look Up.”

But that’s another story.

So we’ll see what happens The pandemic is ebbing, and movies are coming back! Next, let’s see Broadway start to fill up! Isn’t everyone sick of being home already?

 

 

HBO’s “Gilded Age” Struggles to Find Audience, Rhythm But Louisa Jacobson, Meryl Streep’s Kid, is a Hit

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HBO’s “The Gilded Age,” the Americanization of “Downton Abbey,” is struggling to find an audience and a rhythm.

Monday night’s second episode scored just 542,000 viewers, down about 40,000 from the previous week. Still, it was better than “Euphoria” or “Billions” this past week.

“The Gilded Age” comes from the great Julian Fellowes, who created and writes (still–the movies) “Downton Abbey” and Robert Altman’s wonderful movie, “Gosford Park.”

This show was created for American TV and was supposed to be on NBC. It was moved to HBO because the NBC exec who bought it there left the network for HBO. Still, it looks like an NBC show. The production has no nuance. It’s very…bright and sharp. And it’s set in the 1880s. The lighting makes it look like the 1900s. The sets are convincing enough, but there’s a lot of green screen. When actors stand in front of obvious laid -in video backgrounds, it’s very obvious. Isn’t there a lot of old New York to shoot in?

The acting is up and down, and that’s because the characters are largely retreads of “Downton” people. Christine Baranski is playing Maggie Smith, for example. There’s an upstairs and a downstairs. Baranski’s haughty Agnes van Rhijn is snobby and demeaning. Still I kind of like her. Kristine Nielsen, a Broadway giant whom I adore, is playing Mrs. Patmore the head of the kitchen. (She even looks like her.) And so on. You could draw lines between the two shows and find all the comparisons.

Meryl Streep has three daughters in real life. Mamie and Grace Gummer are already well established and incredibly talented. But now comes the youngest, Louisa Jacobson (using a family name) as the bright eyed ingenue Marian who comes to the van Rhijn mansion from the mid west to seek her fortune. Marian is right out Edith Wharton, Jane Austen, and Henry James. Jacobson is so at ease, she’s an instant star. She has the family gene. I promise I won’t always call her “Meryl Streep’s daughter” but this is her launch. If “The Gilded Age” ends with these 10 episodes, Jacobson still has a bright future.

There are some other highlights. Cynthia Nixon is lovely as Baranski’s naive, bumbling sister Ada. Her performance is a relief compared to this new season of “Sex and the City.” Morgan Spector is growing on me as George Russell, the interloper robber baron who wants to build a new train station in Manhattan. He’s very JR Ewing. Denée Ayana Benton is a real find as Peggy Scott, the young Black woman who is befriended by Marian and comes to live and work in the van Rhijn house. (She also gets Audra McDonald as her mom– four stars.)

Much has been made of all the Broadway stars coming and going in this show. Kelli O’Hara, Patrick Page, Donna Murphy, and Katie Finneran are among the others, as well as Debra Monk. So it’s a good employment center for New York actors. We’re always in favor of that.

I’m watching “The Gilded Age” in real time, not off the press site. So we’ll keep watching and hoping things keep getting better.

Desperate Times in Movies: “West Side Story” Will Stream Not Just on DisneyPlus, But Also Rival HBO Max

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The whole saga of Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” remake is stomach turning.

The film got great reviews up front. But Disney did little else to promote it. The result is a $30 million box office that should have been one-hundred-and-thirty. The marketing was terrible, and audiences stayed away.

When things looked bleak, the studio did nothing. They could have had a special holiday event on Disney Plus for Christmas or New Year’s. Silence. They also didn’t send physical DVD screeners out to press or to SAG. The movie should have gotten a SAG Best Ensemble nomination but missed. And the Golden Globes didn’t get it at all.

Now Disney is finally going to stream “West Side Story.” They’ll debut it on Disney Plus on March 2nd. But in a weird move, they’re also putting it on their rival, HBO Max. So if you have HBO, you’ll be able to watch it for free. It’s a little late for all this attention, but at least it’s something.

Why they’re waiting til March 2nd beats me. Final voting for the Academy Awards begins March 17 and closes five days later. By then everyone in the Academy will at least have had the chance to watch Spielberg’s really great film. I thought “West Side Story” was going to be Best Picture front runner, and I’m very disappointed that didn’t work out. Maybe this will help. I sure hope so.

 

Desperate Times in Media: Barry Diller Closes EW, InStyle Print Editions, Vogue Trots Out Kim Kardashian

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If things weren’t bad in the print world, now they have reached the point of despair.

Barry Diller, media mogul, bought a bunch of former Time Life magazines from Meredith Publications. Now he’s closing six of them including Entertainment Weekly and In Style. He’s keeping the digital versions, the websites, but the magazines will end their runs in April. It’s notable that Diller’s company, IAC, also owns the Daily Beast website, but they have not reported this story. The Wall Street Journal broke the news.

At Conde Nast, things are just as desperate. With flagging circulation, Anna Wintour has stooped low with the new issue of Vogue. She’s put Kim Kardashian on the cover and a big splashy photo shoot inside. The story, as it were, is a lovely puff piece. Kim probably thinks she has a shot at the vacant Supreme Court seat now.

In Style won’t be missed. They routinely paid subjects so they could photograph their homes. I’m surprised that Diller didn’t leverage the brand into a home furnishings show on cable. They seem to be thriving on TLC and other outlets.

Entertainment Weekly, the magazine, will be much missed and mourned. I wrote for them 30 years ago and it was a real generator of talent and excitement. So many of the original staff have gone on to become authorities in entertainment journalism, that’s the great result of all that work.

The sad part of the Diller decision is the loss of 200 jobs. That really hurts. And eventually I’m sure EW will be moved into People magazine’s website. What’s happened to People is mind boggling. Once the bible of pop entertainment news, now it’s like a bad version of the AARP Magazine. This week Lionel Richie is on the cover. We love Lionel, but he’s not exactly contemporary. Being a judge on “American Idol” doesn’t require a People cover. They also seem to make a lot of mistakes, and omit facts from stories either from ignorance or some unknown agenda.

As for Vogue, Kim Kardashian, she’s been there before, and it hasn’t helped the situation. Vogue is still losing circulation in print and digital. And they always confront the fate of EW, In Style, and all the other magazines that have closed.

Meanwhile we wait to see the Vanity Fair Hollywood issue cover.

PS Here’s a great cover of EW. I interviewed Ellen Barkin for the Blake Edwards movie, “Switch.” And I wrote about all the recurring characters on “Dallas” as the  show went off the air after 14 years.

Kristen Stewart Could Be the Next Star from Jenny Lewis Video to Get an Oscar

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In 2014, pop cult favorite Jenny Lewis released a video for her new song, “Just One of the Guys.”

The video featured three actresses. Two of them wound up getting Oscars. Now the third is nominated for one.

Anne Hathaway had just received hers for Best Supporting Actress in “Les Miserables” the year before, in 2013.

Two years later, Brie Larson’s career broke out of “Room” with Best Actress (2016).

Now Kristen Stewart is nominated for her turn as Princess Diana in “Spencer.” If Stewart wins, Lewis will have three Oscar winners to boast about from that shoot. As it is, she has three Oscar nominees, which ain’t bad.

Lewis, the one time leader of the great band Rilo Kiley, has been on tour opening for Harry Styles. Over the years she’s been touted by Elvis Costello and is very close to Bill Murray. Check out her music. She obviously knows what she’s doing!