High School Arts Video Production Curriculum
Video Production Curriculum
VIDEO COPYRIGHT LAWS AND ISSUES
FAIR USE - USE IT OR LOSE IT
Stay Free! High School Media Literacy Curriculum
How did Mad Hot Ballroom survive the copyright cartel?
Answer: by limiting music that played in classrooms, haggling over clearance fees, and cutting out a scene.
Sewell: We first cleared music for two years for festival use, and
then went back and negotiated for worldwide commercial use in all
media, for perpetuity. It was extremely expensive. For most films,
music licensing is 1 to 10 percent of the production budget; ours came
in at 45 percent: $140,000.
The biggest problem was granting Most Favored Nation status.
[Granting a rights holder Most Favored Nation status requires giving
them the highest fee you pay for a comparable song. For example, if
Warner Chappell asks $10,000 for a clip but you have to license a Sony
clip for $12,000, you'd have to also give Warner Chappell $12,000 if it
has MFN status. - ed.] I would only agree to that for the classics.
Things like Frank Sinatra hits.
How much did it cost for the average song?Sewell: It depends on how many entities are attached to it. Our
typical total cost for a classic was about $15,000-20,000, split
between publisher and master rights. With the Rocky Theme, the publishers didn't want to overexpose the song. That was the issue with Ray Charles' "Hit the Road Jack" as well.