I mean, the more I think about it, those guys at Axanar really are a lot like the Decepticons of old...
Peters --> Megatron
Burnett --> Starscream
Fat Terry --> Soundwave
If the new series is being made by CBS, and has been announced as not be connected to Star Trek Beyond, why would they need "the Paramount/Abrams blessing"?
I had dropped this myself, having read the comments here; but then I looked in Wikipedia and at the Google results for the term.
I am also actively uncomfortable with talking about third parties (staff, etc.) personal motives and especially about personal relationships and the like.
Re the lawsuit, I wonder whether the argument that the studio prove their copyright ownership in detail will survive. Clearly it is a straw bale in the jet engine tactic, and down the road allows the defense to undermine the case by attacking the trail of ownership itself if ownership is allowed to be examined and questioned. It seems to me every copyright defendant would try the same tactic if they could. There must be precedent to keep this manageable.
Alec switching girlfriends is kind of a big deal. A lot of the donors liked her (and her cat), so depending how it all went down they might be upset. Plus, she's not a rando GF, she's an Axanar producer and the fulfillment lady, on the front line of customer service. I would think some donors would care a great deal.
Plus, we don't know if she's going to be named a doe, or if she's ever been paid for working "60 hours a week plus weekends" for over a year.
True, it doesn't matter for the case in the courtroom; but it will matter with regard to Axanar's legal team's attempts to get the Star Trek fanbase to try and put pressure on CBS/Paramount to just settle the case. Axanar's team is trying to do everything they can to get CBS/Paramount to the settlement table and that's pretty obvious by them NOT reigning in Mr. Peters online; and their lawyer's willingness to give interviews to the media to spread their spin on the case.But that doesn't matter. Ranahan DEFINED the term in her motion filing. Unless the court rejects that definition, that is the only definition that matters.
Also: It's worth repeating that Diana Kingsbury is not just some third party tangentially connected to this case or Axanar simply because she's Alec's former girlfriend. She was hired full-time (per comments from Robert Meyer Burnett last year:
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(source: How $1.1 Million ‘Star Trek’ Fan Movie Has Escaped Studio Shutdown (So Far)
...to serve as the perks & fulfillment person on the project. She's had a regularly featured sub-blog on the Axanar website for updating donors on their items being shipped. She's credited on the film as an associate producer on "Prelude to Axanar" and as a co-producer on "Axanar" the film. Perhaps most damningly, she's seen in multiple photos on the Axanar website, "Axanar Fan Page" and other promotional items distributed by Peters and the production promoting the film at various convention booths.
She has every reason to side with CBS and Paramount right now if she so chooses, and probably should, given that the probability of she being named one of the "Does" is pretty high.
Let me see if I'm finally getting this straight. She's defining the term "mockumentary" as meaning simply a "documentary of fictional events," so as not to associate the word with parody and satire as so many other definitions do. So, does that mean she's claiming it protected under fair use as a legitimate type of documentary, in which there is no intent of parody or satire (humorous or otherwise)? Because it was essentially within a category of documentaries (a documentary over a fictional event), it's protected? Seems that would open up a future can of worms. If she "won" that idea, "Axanar" could be rewritten to be told as a series of flashbacks much like "Prelude" was. It would simply be a more detailed mockumentary of the fictional event. Or am I way off here?But that doesn't matter. Ranahan DEFINED the term in her motion filing. Unless the court rejects that definition, that is the only definition that matters.
But that doesn't matter. Ranahan DEFINED the term in her motion filing. Unless the court rejects that definition, that is the only definition that matters.
I don't want to get into Peters' personal relationships (because despite what that moron thinks, I don't care) ... however, just because they are broken up doesn't necessarily mean that they have a bad relationship.
I mean, I live in Grenada right now with my ex. It can work.![]()
It just bugs me that this relationship turnover was never discussed anywhere. They have been presented as a happy couple up until now. It feels like another secret Alec kept from the donors. Tony Todd, anyone?
I realize Diana may continue in her role as the fulfillment director and be perfectly happy, but it just looks sneaky.
Let me see if I'm finally getting this straight. She's defining the term "mockumentary" as meaning simply a "documentary of fictional events," so as not to associate the word with parody and satire as so many other definitions do. So, does that mean she's claiming it protected under fair use as a legitimate type of documentary, in which there is no intent of parody or satire (humorous or otherwise)?
It just bugs me that this relationship turnover was never discussed anywhere. They have been presented as a happy couple up until now. It feels like another secret Alec kept from the donors. Tony Todd, anyone?
I realize Diana may continue in her role as the fulfillment director and be perfectly happy, but it just looks sneaky.
It just bugs me that this relationship turnover was never discussed anywhere. They have been presented as a happy couple up until now. It feels like another secret Alec kept from the donors. Tony Todd, anyone?
I realize Diana may continue in her role as the fulfillment director and be perfectly happy, but it just looks sneaky.
For the 500th time here ... the motion to dismiss or strike is not listing defenses. It's a technical argument to try and throw the case out (or reduce it greatly) based on technical aspects of the case. This is not their defense or anything like it.
They are not dealing with the law itself at the moment, but instead at what they believe (and hope) the court will require of the plaintiffs in filing the suit.
It's like if we're playing Scrabble. You put a word on the board, and I challenge it. That challenge could change the game in some way (like switch leads), but it really has nothing to do with your overall play-style.
Ranahan isn't looking for the best tiles right now. She's simply challenging a single word. And it's up to the dictionary, er judge, to determine if she's right or wrong.
We are all hung up on "mockumentary," but it's just a descriptor. It could suggest what she plans on using as a future defense and the like, but this is not an answer to the complaint. It's a response in the form of a motion. Nothing more. Nothing less.
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