Stiller ilsken när Vita huset klipper ihop actionfilm med krigsfoto
Skådespelaren Ben Stiller har sett Vita husets nya hyllningsfilm för kriget i Iran, och han är inte glad.
Filmklippet, som delats av Vita husets konto i sociala medier, har korsklippt scener ur kända filmer och serier med vad som tycks vara videomaterial från verkliga attacker mot Iran.
Bland filmerna som används finns, förutom ”Braveheart”, ”Deadpool” och ”Transformers” även Ben Stiller-filmen ”Tropic Thunder”.
”Vi har aldrig gett er tillåtelse och har inget intresse av att vara en del av er propagandamaskin. Krig är inte en film”, skriver Stiller på X.
lista
Wikipedias lista över artister som motsatt sig att deras musik används av Trump
Wikipedia (en)
A major aspect of Donald Trump's presidential election campaigns, in his 2016, 2020, and 2024 campaigns, was unauthorized use of music at his prominent and frequent political rallies. Below are musicians who have voiced opposition to their music being used by Trump at his rallies, or for other political purposes, and the actions they took in response to their music's use.
Separately to the individual cases below, a group of artists including Mick Jagger, Lorde, Sia, Blondie, Sheryl Crow, Green Day, Lionel Richie, Elvis Costello, Keith Richards, Steven Tyler and Rosanne Cash in collaboration with the Artist Rights Alliance, have signed a letter demanding that politicians seek permission before playing their music at campaign rallies and public events. Trump's use of music without permission has become the subject of satire, with The Onion humorously claiming that the estate of Irving Berlin was suing Trump for his glockenspiel rendition of "God Bless America", and that the Francis Scott Key estate had sent Trump a cease and desist letter demanding he stop playing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at his rallies.
Venues and political campaigns can buy rights to play songs through licensing packages offered by performing rights organizations such as BMI and ASCAP. BMI and ASCAP allow artists to remove a song from a campaign's Political Entities License. After BMI or ASCAP notifies the campaign of the song's removal, the campaign must stop using the song or risk legal action for copyright infringement. A political campaign that uses a licensed song without the artist's permission may also risk legal action on grounds of trademark infringement, false advertising, or right of publicity.
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