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11/02/2022

SiriusXM’s Pandora Sued for Allegedly Failing to License Comedy Works

Chris Rock, Kevin Hart, Dave Chapelle

Pandora, the digital music platform owned by SiriusXM, is being sueded for  streaming the recordings of comedians without properly licensing the underlying works according to court documents.

L.A. law firm King & Ballow filed copyright-infringement lawsuits against Pandora on Monday (Feb 7) on behalf of five comedians or their estates: Robin Williams, George Carlin, Andrew Dice Clay, Bill Engvall and Ron White. Each are represented by digital rights management and collection agency Word Collections according to Variety.

“For years… Pandora has illegally made reproductions and digital broadcasts on its servers and provided streaming access to its users without a proper public performance license and, when applicable, a reproduction right license,” the lawsuits allege.

Stand-up comedians have contended that they should be treated like singer-songwriters, earning a separate royalty for the underlying “literary work” in addition to the performance of it.

The complaints against Pandora allege that each plaintiff is entitled to the “maximum amount of statutory damages,” which is $150,000 per copyrighted work for each act of copyright infringement. In total, the five lawsuits seek $41.55 million in damages from Pandora.

Pandora “knew or should have known that the harm caused by its repeated unlicensed public performance of the Works over the Internet was aimed at comedy writers and comedy publishers,” each lawsuit states.

In the filings, Pandora also admitted that it “could be subject to significant liability for copyright infringement and may no longer be able to operate under [the company’s] existing licensing regime.”

The lawsuits against Pandora were filed Feb. 7 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. Each of the plaintiffs is repped by King & Ballow partner Richard Busch.

Spotify has a similar issue with comedians — and last year, the streaming service removed multiple comedy albums, evidently over licensing disputes. Those included works by Jim Gaffigan, John Mulaney, Dave Attell, Mike Birbiglia, Chad Daniels, Tom Segura, Jeff Foxworthy, Tiffany Haddish, Kevin Hart, Jeff Dunham, Larry the Cable Guy, Patton Oswalt, Bob Newhart, Paula Poundstone, Robin Williams, Amy Schumer and Lisa Lampanelli.

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