Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 61 - 72 of 72

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Square Peg In A Round Hole: The Current State Of The Video Privacy Protection Act For Videos On The Internet And The Need For Updated Legislation, Schooner Sonntag Apr 2017

A Square Peg In A Round Hole: The Current State Of The Video Privacy Protection Act For Videos On The Internet And The Need For Updated Legislation, Schooner Sonntag

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


Deflategate: Tom Brady's Battle Against The Nfl And Arbitration, David Berger Jan 2017

Deflategate: Tom Brady's Battle Against The Nfl And Arbitration, David Berger

Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review

No abstract provided.


Playing Around Hart And Keller's Full-Court Press: Designing A Federal Compulsory Licensing Regime For Rights Of Publicity That Enables Developers And Compensates Rights Holders, Will Bucher Oct 2016

Playing Around Hart And Keller's Full-Court Press: Designing A Federal Compulsory Licensing Regime For Rights Of Publicity That Enables Developers And Compensates Rights Holders, Will Bucher

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


Fight Terror, Not Twitter: Insulating Social Media From Material Support Claims, Nina I. Brown Oct 2016

Fight Terror, Not Twitter: Insulating Social Media From Material Support Claims, Nina I. Brown

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


Online Gaming And The Pay-To-Win Problem: Legal Deterrence Or Industry Self-Regulation?, Simone Darakjian Apr 2016

Online Gaming And The Pay-To-Win Problem: Legal Deterrence Or Industry Self-Regulation?, Simone Darakjian

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


Stripping Down A Victory For Adult Entertainment: Showtime Entertainment, Llc V. Town Of Mendon, Ethan Bond Apr 2016

Stripping Down A Victory For Adult Entertainment: Showtime Entertainment, Llc V. Town Of Mendon, Ethan Bond

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Twelfth Round: Will Boxing Save Itself?, Katherine Figueroa Apr 2016

The Twelfth Round: Will Boxing Save Itself?, Katherine Figueroa

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

No abstract provided.


You'll Never Work In This Town Again: Employment, Economics, And Unpaid Internships In The Entertainment And Media Industries, Mark R. Swiech Jan 2016

You'll Never Work In This Town Again: Employment, Economics, And Unpaid Internships In The Entertainment And Media Industries, Mark R. Swiech

Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review

No abstract provided.


By Any Other Name: Image Advertising And The Commercial Speech Doctrine In Jordan V. Jewel, Kelly Miller Oct 2015

By Any Other Name: Image Advertising And The Commercial Speech Doctrine In Jordan V. Jewel, Kelly Miller

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

This Comment focuses on the commercial speech doctrine as applied to modern advertising strategies, specifically, corporate image advertising. It centers on the recent litigation between basketball superstar Michael Jordan and a Chicago-area grocery chain, Jewel-Osco. When Michael Jordan was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame, Jewel-Osco was invited to submit a congratulatory ad for a commemorative issue of Sports Illustrated devoted exclusively to Jordan’s career and accomplishments. Because Jordan had spent the bulk of his storied professional basketball career with the Chicago Bulls, the ad seemed a natural fit. Jordan, who did not give permission for his name to …


Principles Of Contract Law Applied To Entertainment And Sports Contracts: A Model For Balancing The Rights Of The Industry With Protecting The Interests Of Minors, John H. Shannon, Richard J. Hunter Jr. Jan 2015

Principles Of Contract Law Applied To Entertainment And Sports Contracts: A Model For Balancing The Rights Of The Industry With Protecting The Interests Of Minors, John H. Shannon, Richard J. Hunter Jr.

Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review

This Article discusses the context of common law and statutory materials dealing with minors who participate in the entertainment and sports fields. The Article describes the changes undertaken as a result of several notorious cases involving prominent child actors, and how the California legislature dealt with issues ranging from set asides of income, approval of contracts by a competent court of jurisdiction, recognition of the legitimate interests of all parties to the contract, to principles under which a minor would be precluded from disaffirming a contract. The Article then applies and extends the principles developed in entertainment contracts to minors …


Adapt Or Die: Aereo, Ivi, And The Right Of Control In An Evolving Digital Age, Johanna R. Alves-Parks Jan 2014

Adapt Or Die: Aereo, Ivi, And The Right Of Control In An Evolving Digital Age, Johanna R. Alves-Parks

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

The advent of the Internet has had a great effect on the production, distribution, and consumption of television programming. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to ABC, Inc. v. Aereo, Inc. and will now review the issue of unlicensed digital distribution of copyrighted programming in its Spring 2014 term. This Comment will first briefly examine the origins and interconnection between television and digital media, culminating in a discussion of the repercussions of allowing unlicensed over-the-top retransmissions of network broadcast programming to continue to stream over the Internet. It will then examine the decisions in WPIX v. IVI, Inc., ABC, Inc. v. …


Unringing The Bell: Publicly Funded Art And The Government Speech Doctrine, John Barlow Jan 2014

Unringing The Bell: Publicly Funded Art And The Government Speech Doctrine, John Barlow

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

This Article advances the novel argument that within the domain of removing publicly funded art from public display, the application of the Government Speech Doctrine is improper because of the current scope and policy considerations of the Doctrine, the mutable nature of art speech, and artist moral rights. As an alternative, this Article proposes a model statute legislatures should adopt that outlines an appropriate analytical framework for removing public art from public display that takes into consideration individual free speech rights, the government’s right to control its own messages, the nature of art speech, and artist moral rights.