Netflix Files Copyright Lawsuit Against Creators of Unofficial Bridgerton Musical
The company alleges the composers ignored multiple warnings to cease commercial production of the musical.

Netflix has filed a lawsuit against the creators of The Unofficial Bridgerton Musical, alleging copyright infringement. The musical, which won a Grammy this year, has gained popularity (and sold out shows) since its inception on TikTok in January 2021.
The lawsuit alleges that the musical's creators, Abigail Barlow and Emily Bear, violated the company's copyright and that the pair proceeded with productions of the musical despite repeated warnings from Netflix. In the lawsuit, Netflix claims that Barlow and Bear's musical "stretches 'fan fiction' well past its breaking point," and violates Netflix's intellectual property rights.
Netflix also alleges that Barlow and Bear "misrepresented to the audience that they were using Netflix's BRIDGERTON trademark 'with Permission,' while Netflix vigorously objected," as well as producing and promoting their own Bridgerton-themed merchandise. The pair also frequently used verbatim excerpts of dialogue from the show in song lyrics and titles.
"Netflix owns the exclusive right to create Bridgerton songs, musicals, or any other derivative works based on Bridgerton," said Netflix in the suit. "Barlow & Bear cannot take that right—made valuable by others' hard work—for themselves, without permission. Yet that is exactly what they have done."
Both showrunner Shonda Rhimes and Bridgerton novel series author Julia Quinn expressed dismay over the musical's production. According to NBC News, Quinn said in a statement that while she was "flattered" by the early version of the musical on TikTok, but that "there is a difference … between composing on TikTok and recording and performing for commercial gain." Rhimes expressed similar sentiments, writing in a statement that "what started as a fun celebration by Barlow & Bear on social media has turned into the blatant taking of intellectual property solely for Barlow & Bear's financial benefit."
While the musical's creators are in hot water, the legal reasoning has only partially to do with the commercial impact of their work. Rather, what likely makes their work copyright infringement, rather than a protected instance of fair use, relates to a four-pronged legal doctrine that acts as a guide for judges deciding the validity of a copyright infringement claim. According to Columbia University's Copyright Advisory Services, these "four factors" examine the purpose and character of the use, the nature of the copyrighted work, the amount of the portion used, and the effect of the use on the potential market for the work. Barlow and Bear seem to come down on the wrong side of these legal guidelines.
Legally, things do not look good for Barlow and Bear, as their musical closely resembles common classes of derivative—or copyright-violating—work. "This is the super down-the-middle-of-the-plate hardcore violation of copyright law," Richard Epstein, a professor at New York University's law school, tells Reason.
"For example, take a novel and translate it into another language. That's derivative. Take a book and turn it into a TV series. … And so Netflix had to license Julia Quinn's books to write their series," said Kristelia Garcia, a law professor at the University of Colorado, during an appearance on the Slate podcast ICYMI. "Frankly, I'm inclined to think that a musical based off of an audiovisual work like a film is leaning towards a derivative work because it takes the content and recasts it in some new way."
Garcia also noted that the musical's use of verbatim dialogue spells legal trouble for the pair: "Even if a court or a jury was to find fair use for the musical as a whole, I would without a doubt think that those particular samples of the dialogue would need to be either licensed or removed from the tracks."
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Bridgerton looks so awful I literally get mad when I see it mentioned and view stills of it.
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Netflix also alleges that Barlow and Bear "misrepresented to the audience that they were using Netflix's BRIDGERTON trademark 'with Permission,' while Netflix vigorously objected," as well as producing and promoting their own Bridgerton-themed merchandise. The pair also frequently used verbatim excerpts of dialogue from the show in song lyrics and titles.
This seems pretty clear cut.
It's such a clear-cut case I'm wondering how we're even talking about. I'm wondering how they couldn't get injunctive relief before these people started making money off of it.
What's the point of going after them before? They got money now.
Should have called it "Bridgerton: A Porn Parody" if they wanted to get away with it.
It's a Victorian Drama, but with light skinned black trans lesbians with side shaves!
If they aren't sporting a Skrillex hairdo how would you know that they're gay?
Also, they're called Octoroons, Paul.
Why is this news?
I'd like to file this under whofuckingcares.
Zoomers care. And zoomers are the future of Libertarianism Plus.
It doesn't even come out and push the libertarian case against intellectual property. It's not a brickbat of government actors acting badly. It's a meaningless useless news report.
What has this rag become? It used to be libertarian, pushing political ideology and individualist principles. It turned into a TDS-riddled swamp of BOAF SIDZ and utilitarianism. Is this the next step, some kind of boring news reports, maybe an attempt to get a tax writeoff by going out of business?
WTF?
Reason Online does not have much or any editorial. Sometimes, I think a useful thing would be for them to move their blogging articles into a specific section. I think they used to do that with Hit-N-Run. Maybe that was the name of their morning newsletter previously. I can't quite recall.
The web site seems almost devoid of purpose at this point. I haven't seen the print magazine in a while, but the monthly links they put up aren't encouraging. TDS hit them hard, and they turned into an anyone-but-Trump rag. Or so it seems. I can understand detesting Trump, he's an ignoramus in a lot of ways. But anyone who voted anti-Trump just to be anti-Trump is not thinking. We live in a best-of-two-bad-choices political world, libertarians are never going to be one of those parties, and going partisan like Reason did defeats the purpose of being an independent third party.
I really don't want to ever have to find another group of people whose comments are worth sifting through and adding to.
They had to find something even less important than abortion or gay marriage, and this is all they could come up with.
Guys, write your own dialogue, change the setting to the court of Louis XIV, maybe make some more tweaks, and presto! it's not a ripoff, but a period drama whose popularity happens to have been enhanced by another, different period drama.
I would be equally bored in either case.
This is a good reminder that intellectual property protection is not about freedom but the exact opposite, restricting the creative freedom of others. If we lived in a world where there was no intellectual property protection or there was much less of it than today, people would be just as free to create things as they are now. They would, however, have much less power to restrict the freedom of others to do the same.
Maybe intellectual property rights are a good idea because it encourages people to create wealth and they serve justice and fairness in some ways. Even if that is true, such rights do not expand freedom.
I kept a list for a while of inventors who relied on patents to get rich, and failed, while society suffered.
* James Watt improved Newcomen's unpatented steam engine (which was an incredibly primitive design; it relied on dousing the hot steam vertical cylinder with cold water so gravity would lower it, and the next cycle had to heat the cylinder all over again) yet did not know how to make higher pressure steam engine and prevented others from doing so; there were estimates he delayed railway steam engine for 20 or more years.
The Wright Brothers certainly were far advanced of everybody else, but they sat back and waited for purchase orders, did not develop their planes any further while others did, and famously got in a patent dispute with Curtis which lasted until the feds forcibly bought their patent so they could get airplanes made for WW I, 14 years later.
Eli Whitney (?) invented the cotton gin, which turned out to be such an obvious invention that he sold few patented machines and spent all his profits trying to sue everybody else.
Biro invented the ball point pen, then went broke trying to defend his patent.
Someone, I forget his name, had a garbage patent for a revolver which did happen to have bored-through chambers; Smith & Wesson, I think, bought his patent, but the contract required him to defend it while they paid him a pittance in royalties, and he went broke.
Long long list. I have long since gotten the impression from it and from friends who got patents at work that most patents are trivial differences or minor improvements, and mostly a joke.
For the most part yes. The other thing is that business secrets are not covered by patent and trademark law. So, for example, if someone managed to get the recipe for Coke, they could produce it and as long as they didn't call it Coke, which is a trademarked name, there is nothing the Coca Cola Company could do about it. So what is and is not something that can be protected by a patent is really pretty arbitrary.
Ultimately, you invent something to either use it or sell it. I honestly don't see how other people's ability to sell that really matters.
But what's the harm in keeping Bridgerton on Netflix?
Perhaps better stated: metastasized outside of Netflix.
FYI, all jokes aside, I'm a little skeptical of these types of assessments. For instance, it refuses to take into account any positive side effects from patent protections. Things that are admittedly difficult to quantify. Ie, without any possibility of protections, what wouldn't have been invented in the first place?
I can't say or even pretend to make this argument myself but to suggest that the positives were zero I think would be dubious. So the question becomes did the negatives outweigh any positives?
So the question becomes did the negatives outweigh any positives?
I can't answer that question with certainty but I feel very confident that when the patent outlives its author or goes on forever because the "author" is a corporation that will never die, the negatives definitely outweigh the positives.
or goes on forever because the "author" is a corporation that will never die, the negatives definitely outweigh the positives.
No disagreement there.
Patents are not like copyrights that have been extended effectively forever. With the exception of pharma, patents die in 14 years from award.
Oh, fun fact about the steam engine, I believe it was originally sold as a service. You rented the steam engine, and the price you paid was based on some licensing formula that calculated how many employees it replaced- or did the labor for.
You didn't own it, and you were happy.
I've started looking at it from the point of scarcity. Without scarcity, no capitalism is possible.