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Here's the Bad News on WKRP in Cincinnati
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
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WKRP in Cincinnati, Season 1 DVD
List of Music Replacements and Cuts

Pilot
“Queen of the Forest" by Ted Nugent replaced with generic music.

Pilot Part 2
“That Old Time Rock n’ Roll” by Bob Seger replaced with generic music.

Les on a Ledge
Song at the beginning replaced.

Hoodlum Rock
The songs (by the band Detective) are intact, but the episode is a cut 22-minute syndication version. The original full-length version is available at the Museum of Television and Radio.

Hold-Up
All songs replaced.

Bailey’s Show
Two songs replaced. Some footage cut from one scene.

Turkeys Away
“Dogs” by Pink Floyd replaced. Much of the scene has been cut out entirely.

Love Returns
Rock songs replaced. Part of a scene has been cut.

Mama’s Review
Clip show.

A Date With Jennifer
“Hot Blooded” by Foreigner replaced. 22-minute cut syndication version.

The Contest Nobody Could Win
All songs replaced.

Tornado
Elvis Costello song "Goon Squad" replaced. Some footage cut.

Goodbye, Johnny
“Surfin’ U.S.A.” by the Beach Boys replaced.

Johnny Comes Back
All songs replaced with generic music.

Never Leave Me, Lucille
“Everybody Rock n’ Roll the Place” by Eddie Money replaced. The episode originally started with Les singing “Heartbreak Hotel”; that footage has been cut.

I Want to Keep My Baby
All songs replaced except one Bob Marley song.

A Commercial Break
All rock songs replaced.

Who is Gordon Sims?
One song replaced.

I Do… I Do… For Now
Jennifer’s doorbell, which played “Fly Me to the Moon,” is replaced with a public-domain song.

Young Master Carlson
All songs replaced, even the theme from Patton, a Fox film.

Fish Story
All songs replaced.

Preacher
All songs replaced.

*http://zvbxrpl.blogspot.com/2007/03/wkrp-dvd-not-ok.html

Skip
ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!!
CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it.
Outta here

Billy Video
 Last edited: by Winston Smith
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorFunkyLA
Will you remove your hat?
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Oh man this is Not Groovy
Signature? We don't need no stinking... hang on, this has been done... blast [oooh now in Widescreen]
Ah... well you see.... I thought I'd say something more interesting... but cannot think of anything..... oh well
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantCalidain
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Registered: March 16, 2007
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What is the justification???
My Collection!!!
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantdrjenkins
Registered: March 14, 2007
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Quoting Calidain:
Quote:
What is the justification???

The music was only licensed for broadcast. New licenses must be negotiated for DVD, and the price is usually prohibitive.

-drj
They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty or safety.
--Benjamin Franklin
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributorlyonsden5
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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Oh the humanity! 
 Last edited: by lyonsden5
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorRHFactor
Is this program dead?
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Well, poopies.  I was really looking forward to this set.  Now I don't even want it.  They changed Jennifer's DOORBELL!  That was a classic!
Build a man a fire and you keep him warm for a day.  Set a man on fire and you keep him warm the rest of his life.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorVoltaire53
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Quoting drjenkins:
Quote:
Quoting Calidain:
Quote:
What is the justification???

The music was only licensed for broadcast. New licenses must be negotiated for DVD, and the price is usually prohibitive.


And adding to that sometimes the copyright holder just puts a blanket "at no cost will this be cleared" on certain music (all the Beatles stuff at the moment IIRC, and more Police? Led Zep?). except in exceptional circumstances such as if a film supports a certain cause that the copyright holder also supports.

Persoanlly I hate the system and believe there should be some sort of legal change where (if a piece has already been cleared for broadcast) there is a "maximum percentage of profit" that can be charged for its use in follow up materials like DVDs... however this isn't the case and is unlikely to be so.
It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorBad Father
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Well, this plain sucks the big hatchi.  I loved that show principally for the music.  What did they replace everything with?  Freakn' Barry Manilow??? .  They can keep their damn DVD.  Not gonna waste a dime on those bastards.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorKevin
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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yeah, this is saving me money.

And I was especially looking forward to the Tornado episode.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
The Truth is Silly Putty
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting Voltaire53:
Quote:
Persoanlly I hate the system and believe there should be some sort of legal change where (if a piece has already been cleared for broadcast) there is a "maximum percentage of profit" that can be charged for its use in follow up materials like DVDs... however this isn't the case and is unlikely to be so.


So, a creator should only have limited rights to earning money from his/her creation?

Disney would love you... or do you not remember Peggy Lee's lawsuit against Disney? When she signed the contract to work with Disney on "Lady & the Tramp", she insisted on including a clause setting royalties not only for theatrical and television showings of the movie with her voice, her songs and her singing, but also included royalties for technologies yet invented. So when the video tape release of L&tT came out, Disney felt they owed her nothing more. In 1987, she sued and in 1991, she won... that video tape reproductions and sales were exactly what that clause would cover.

So now, decades after the TV series, a DVD set is released, but the owners of the music ought not to get paid for its use? A person/company leases the rights to property and you own those rights forever without additional compensation?

It's a shame that all the episodes will be compromised, but I believe had they paid the royalties for this DVD's music, sales would be higher, offsetting the costs. As for unobtainable rights, that's where WKRP producers could sue the copyright holders for restraint of trade. And possibly win.

Sometimes you need to pay for creative properties every time you use them. Like all the time.
If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.

Cliff
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorVoltaire53
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting VibroCount:
Quote:
Quoting Voltaire53:
Quote:
Persoanlly I hate the system and believe there should be some sort of legal change where (if a piece has already been cleared for broadcast) there is a "maximum percentage of profit" that can be charged for its use in follow up materials like DVDs... however this isn't the case and is unlikely to be so.


So, a creator should only have limited rights to earning money from his/her creation?
It's a shame that all the episodes will be compromised, but I believe had they paid the royalties for this DVD's music, sales would be higher, offsetting the costs. As for unobtainable rights, that's where WKRP producers could sue the copyright holders for restraint of trade. And possibly win.
Sometimes you need to pay for creative properties every time you use them. Like all the time.


I fully agree they should be paid but I don't understand why people so rich they need never work another day in their lives should have the power to stop/mess up a DVD release just by asking for 1000 times the amount the DVD will make in profit.
If they agreed to the original use on TV it's not like it's an inappropriate usage that they would be embaressed about and blocking a DVD release, or making it significantly less successful, just because they can for a snippet of music is something I feel is wrong.

AIUI any bit-part actor demanding massive fees and holding up releases (at least in the UK) can be told by the acting Union that they must accept a reasonable payment because otherwise they're holding up royalties for other actors... why this can't be the case with music and a 'reasonable maximum fee' be set on re-release music so copyright holders (often big holding companies rather than the artists anyway) don't mess up the artisitc integrity of the release through pure spite and greed.

FWIW I personally doubt in this case that the extra sales would have made anything like the royalties demanded by some of those artists (I suspect the DVD production people did their sums before making this decision... I notice later series of Quantum Leap had to go back on the idea of keeping all the music as it obviously didn't make enough for the first releases to be worth it) and I have never heard of any successful case for a restraint of trade case in cases like this where replacement music being possible can always be argued in defence.
It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRifter
Reg. Jan 27, 2002
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This sort of thing has been common in photography circles forever.  Whoever owns the rights to a picture is in the catbird seat.  If a model doesn't pay attention to the way a model release is worded, she often finds herself losing large amounts of money when the photographer sells those nude art pictures she made ten years earlier, and so on.

Most of the music artists who were under contract and are supposed to get royalties on their stuff, often don't because they don't actually own the rights to their work.  Record company execs made fortunes off the talents of musicians and singers who only wanted to perform their music and didn't pay attention to the fine print in recording contracts. 

The record business is almost as corrupt (remember the payola scandals?) as politicians.
John

"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964
Make America Great Again!
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantBattling Butler
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Horrible and inexcusable, truly lame! 

Reminds me of the Northern Exposure DVDs which have also gutted 99% of the original brilliant soundtrack. 
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantjgilligan
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This is quite unfortunate.

I definitely agree that the copywrite holders deserve royalties for the use of their music. But it seems insane that the royalties would be so expensive that it would be more cost effective to go back and re-edit these episodes with other music which they will most likely ALSO have to pay royalties on.


This doesn't seem like much of a difference than a song being used in a film.  It's licensed, and royalties are paid.  Then, the film goes into home video.  I assume that these copywrite holders are being compensated from each sale.

I hate seeing this done to classic TV shows.  There should be some way for this to be arbitrated.  In this case, most of these songs are not played in their entirety.  I heard that royalties are not required if less than 10 or 12 measures of the song are used on radio.  So, if I remember the show correctly, many songs would fall in to this category if the same rules apply.

To me, copywrite holders should be happy that they can make some money...  They are doing no further work, and a reasonable royalty should be acceptable.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
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Quoting jgilligan:
Quote:
To me, copywrite holders should be happy that they can make some money...  They are doing no further work, and a reasonable royalty should be acceptable.


So someone else gets to determine how much money my creation is worth? And if they don't want to pay me more, they can continue to use it as they choose?

Bah, humbug.

I wrote a paper in 1966. I was (very well) paid for first North American serial rights, yet I still retained copyright (not copywrite... it's the right to vend copies). I sold additional rights to the publication to include the paper in a book they published. We were both happy.

Then, without printing my copyright information on it, a British magazine reprinted it. I sued to obtain my international copyright back. I won. The publisher went (UK style) bankrupt to avoid paying me or the other writers from whom they stole. By my paper being published without a copyright, every publisher in Europe and Asia decided the material was in the public domain. The paper has been reprinted hundreds of times, often without my name, often with edits (which can cange the tone of the paper), and under other people's copyright. I cannot afford to chase them all down. The paper is intact on the internet, without my name.

I've lost all income from it, yet it remains the definitive paper on cheap, highly effective modifications to a weapon of revolution. My work, my research, my skills in writing it, but I no longer make a cent.

Yet I hear it quoted all the time.

I own all the copyrights to everything I've written: manuscripts, music, lyrics, screenplays and teleplays. You wish to use something of mine, you need to pay me. We can negotiate, but I will require my due.

That's how I earn a living.

Why should you continue to make money off my work without continuing to pay me?
If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.

Cliff
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantjgilligan
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Quoting VibroCount:
Quote:
Quoting jgilligan:
Quote:
To me, copywrite holders should be happy that they can make some money...  They are doing no further work, and a reasonable royalty should be acceptable.


So someone else gets to determine how much money my creation is worth? And if they don't want to pay me more, they can continue to use it as they choose?

Bah, humbug.

I wrote a paper in 1966. I was (very well) paid for first North American serial rights, yet I still retained copyright (not copywrite... it's the right to vend copies). I sold additional rights to the publication to include the paper in a book they published. We were both happy.

Then, without printing my copyright information on it, a British magazine reprinted it. I sued to obtain my international copyright back. I won. The publisher went (UK style) bankrupt to avoid paying me or the other writers from whom they stole. By my paper being published without a copyright, every publisher in Europe and Asia decided the material was in the public domain. The paper has been reprinted hundreds of times, often without my name, often with edits (which can cange the tone of the paper), and under other people's copyright. I cannot afford to chase them all down. The paper is intact on the internet, without my name.

I've lost all income from it, yet it remains the definitive paper on cheap, highly effective modifications to a weapon of revolution. My work, my research, my skills in writing it, but I no longer make a cent.

Yet I hear it quoted all the time.

I own all the copyrights to everything I've written: manuscripts, music, lyrics, screenplays and teleplays. You wish to use something of mine, you need to pay me. We can negotiate, but I will require my due.

That's how I earn a living.

Why should you continue to make money off my work without continuing to pay me?


I do believe that copyright holders should get paid for their work, I never said otherwise.

What I'm curious about is how much did the copyright holders demand as a royalty or licensing fee for the DVD?  If it was more cost effective for them to re-edit the shows to remove the music, then it MIGHT have been an unreasonable amount.  Re-editing the episodes can't be cheap, especially considering how long that list was the Skip posted.  But, in this case, it must have been cheaper than the fees.

As far as someone else deciding how much your work is worth... sorry, but that is the way of the world.  I can TRY to tell people what I think my work is worth, but the person paying gets to decide.  In this case, the producers of the DVD decided that it wasn't worth what they were asking.  So now the copyright owners don't get anything.  And on top of that, they probably had to pay some legal fees to keep them from using their music.


Maybe I'm just seeing this from the working stiff's point of view.  If I want to make more money, I have to go and do some more work.  I can't just get paid again for work I did last week, or last year.  Copyright holders have an amazing opportunity to continue getting paid for their work long after the work is done.  They aleady agreed to have their music used on the show, they can't rescind that.  Now, the show would like to help them make some more money...  I think I'd take the money!

Now, if the producers of the WKRP DVDs wanted to stiff the copyright holders entirely... Then I agree with their refusal to let them use the music.


And I still think it is quite unfortunate for those of us who would like to see the episodes as they originally aired.  This was one of my favorite shows as I was growing up.  You can't beat the Thanksgiving episode... that was an absolute classic!
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