Well said Sci.
I have read those novels, and if I were Ellison I'd be pretty annoyed if I didn't get to share in the profits from them too.
Thanks.
I should hasten to say that I don't necessarily agree with Ellison's interpretation of the MBA contract. I haven't researched this to any great extent, but my inclination would be to interpret "significant use" of a writer's concepts and characters as referring to direct adaptations of a given script. In particular, I am skeptical of the idea that any use of a character requires a royalty when there have been four decades of precedents against that idea -- particularly, in Ellison's case, given the appearances of the Guardian of Forever in
Trek novels such as
Yesterday's Son or
Imzadi that he hasn't requested royalties for.
I might be inclined to require a lesser royalty when a character/concept is used in an original way, but I would have to hear good arguments on both sides. Alternately, I might consider the idea of only requiring a royalty if a character is used in an audio/visual tie-in (such as a video game) rather than in a novel or comic.
I do, however, find myself agreeing, at least in principle, with the idea that the studios shouldn't profit off of a writer's work if the writer does not. As such, I can see all sides of this argument, and I think they all have validity. All said and done, I trust that the courts will be able to come to a just decision on this.