Why you won’t see or hear the ‘I have a dream’ speech
Fifty years ago this week, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous I have a dream speech. But in coverage of events celebrating its anniversary, the entirety of Kings address will rarely be reprinted, if at all, nor will viewers see footage of his speech delivered in full.
A few months after King delivered the speech, he sent a copy of the address to the U.S. Copyright office and listed the remarks as a work not reproduced for sale. In legal terms, this is also known as an unpublished work. He subsequently sued to enjoin two publishers from distributing phonographic reproductions of the address. One of the defendants, 20th Century Fox, had filmed and broadcast all of the speeches at the March on Washington at the request of the marchs organizers. From that material, it had reproduced the phonographs that were the subject of the injunction. But a court ruled that, although King had addressed a large public audience in an unrestricted public forum, reproduction without authorization was an infringement of Kings copyright. Performance of the speech, like the performance of a song or play in a public space, did not create a general waiver of Kings right to limit reproduction
Since 1963, King and, posthumously, his estate have strictly enforced control over use of that speech and Kings likeness. A few years ago, the estate received more than $700,000from the nonprofit foundation that created and built the monument to King on the Mall in order to use his words and image. The only legal way to reproduce Kings work at least until it enters the public domain in 2038 is to pay for a licensing fee, rates for which vary. (Individuals visiting the King Center can buy a recording of the I have a dream speech for $20. Licenses for media outlets run into the thousands.)
Although it has been the subject of at least two lawsuits the King estate sued CBS and USA Today for their use of the speech, reaching undisclosed settlements a court has never examined whether and under what circumstances the I have a dream speech may be used without authorization in whats considered a fair use exception.
Read the rest at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-you-wont-see-or-hear-the-i-have-a-dream-speech/2013/08/27/09d2a07a-0e66-11e3-bdf6-e4fc677d94a1_story.html
gopiscrap
(23,733 posts)I wonder if King was worried about how he would support his family...because the tone of the times wouldn't be good for his job market prospects at the time and somehow when he got older, he was going to have to have income for his family.
Myrina
(12,296 posts)... than it is about money.
sinkingfeeling
(51,443 posts)Dollface
(1,590 posts)EC
(12,287 posts)I seem to remember my public speaking class having a recording of the whole thing we listened to.