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Entertainment, Media And the Law: Text, Cases And Problems (American Casebook Series) |  | Author: Paul C. Weiler Publisher: West Group Category: Book
List Price: $153.00 Buy New: $115.42 as of 9/4/2010 18:18 CDT details You Save: $37.58 (25%)
New (9) Used (15) from $110.00
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 255700
Media: Hardcover Edition: 3RD Pages: 1190 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.4 Dimensions (in): 10 x 7.5 x 1.8
ISBN: 0314167226 Dewey Decimal Number: 343 EAN: 9780314167224 ASIN: 0314167226
Publication Date: August 16, 2006 Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description Thoughtfully edited cases to highlight the court's reasoning on the key points at issue make covering the material feasible in a one-term course. And to help readers appreciate the significance of the court decisions, over half the book consists of text that describes the evolution and current state of both the entertainment industry and the relevant legal doctrines. Provides lively accounts of how home video transformed the film industry when a last-minute switch in votes on the Supreme Court made copying TV shows for private consumption a legal "fair use," and how Hollywood unions solved the problem of artistic credits but were unable to counter the attack on the Hollywood Ten.
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| Customer Reviews: A sloppy and unfortunate edition January 17, 2010 Joshua N. Mitchell (Denver, CO USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
West really dropped the ball with Professor Weiler's book, which appears to have passed through the publishing process unedited. The result is a book riddled with errors typographical, grammatical and factual. Nor are these limited to the commentary between cases: this book introduces extraneous words into judicial opinions, an unforgivable sin for a publishing house whose other main line of business is reporting those opinions. The resulting text does a disservice both to Professor Weiler, who appears despite the book's shortcomings to have wide-ranging knowledge of this area of the law, and to the students tasked with learning this subject matter, who will quickly learn not to trust the work in anything but its broadest outlines.
No published work is ever perfect, of course, and a few errors are to be expected. However, the frequency and severity of this book's errors--regularly several to a page, with more in some sections--go far beyond what any reader would expect of a book he paid a few dollars for, much less this inflated price.
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