Artigo Revisado por pares

Audiovisual Works and the Work for Hire Doctrine in the Internet Age

2017; Columbia University Libraries; Volume: 35; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.7916/d83f508x

ISSN

2161-9271

Autores

John Schwab,

Tópico(s)

Media Studies and Communication

Resumo

Chris Carter was one of the most successful writers and creators of television in the 1990s. His works include “Millennium” and, most prominently, “The XFiles.” Mr. Carter created “The X-Files” and was the program’s ‘showrunner,’ meaning he either made or approved every creative decision associated with each episode—including the writing, the direction, the set design, the costuming and the editing. As is common in the world of audiovisual entertainment, Mr. Carter did not own the copyright to “The X-Files.” This created a problem for Mr. Carter, since the commercial success of “The X-Files” made it a prime candidate for syndication. Syndication, also known as second run programming, is the most lucrative aspect of television production. The owner of “The X-Files,” Twentieth Century Fox Television, sold the program’s syndication rights to a separate Fox subsidiary, the FX Network. This original sale led to allegations of self-dealing. Fox subsequently resyndicated the program with a competitor, NBC Universal’s USA Network. When Fox resyndicated, however, the studio claimed that the

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