Entertainment Law

By Melvin Simensky

Entertainment Law
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Emphasizing the business side of the industry, especially the economic risks, this casebook makes use of articles, cases, questions, exercises, statutes and industry contracts. It provides a highly practical learning experience for students interested in this dynamic area of the law. Unlike other casebooks that focus primarily on the law affecting the entertainment industry, this volume presents this subject as a combination of legal principles and business practices. Although the book includes important cases, the authors believe that caselaw is not the best approach to studying entertainment law since most disputes in this area are negotiated or arbitrated, rather than litigated. Thus, rather than relying solely on caselaw, the book provides numerous excerpts from trade publications, such as Variety, to teach the practical aspects of entertainment law. Compared to caselaw, such material is more interesting to read, more current and more directly relevant to the practice of entertainment law. integrated with the materials and offer students numerous drafting and role-playing opportunities. A set of hypotheticals runs throughout the book covering a fictional client pursuing deals in all branches of the entertainment industry - music, film, television, theatre, book publishing and the Internet. Various assignments require the student to draft agreements, letters or memoranda dealing with the issues raised in the chapters. In addition, there is a series of transactional and litigation hypotheticals that include negotiation exercises. These hypotheticals can be addressed later in the semester to allow students to apply the various concepts learned throughout the course. agreements including the Screen Actors Guild Basic Agreement, the Writers Guild Basic Agreement, and the Directors Guild Basic Agreement, as well as entertainment contracts used in the various branches of the entertainment industry and relevant federal and state statutes. The abundance of material in the document supplement provides a wide selection of contracts from which to choose for class discussion, and allows professors to devise numerous hypotheticals in addition to the ones provided in the casebook.

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