ENTERTAINMENT / Music |
Judge: J. Lo must submit to deposition(AP)Updated: 2007-05-19 08:28
Jennifer Lopez appears onstage during MTV's 'Total Request Live' at the MTV Times Square Studios in this March 27, 2007 file photo in New York. Jennifer Lopez has been ordered to answer questions in a lawsuit brought by television writer Jack Bunick, who says the actress and UPN stole his idea for a series about the modeling and nightclub scenes in Miami. Lopez is among six defendants, including UPN and CBS Television, the companies that broadcast 'South Beach.' [AP] NEW YORK - Lawyers fighting over whether Jennifer Lopez knows anything about
the origination of a television series about Miami's modeling and nightclub
scene may hear from the actress within weeks, though one lawyer promised: "I
will not ask for her autograph." Writer Jack Bunick claimed in a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan that the television series that debuted in January 2006 was too similar to a plot he described in 1999 for a pilot episode of a show that would have been called "South Beach Miami." In February, lawyer Orin Snyder argued for Lopez in court papers that although she was executive producer, Lopez was barely involved in the creation and development of "South Beach" and was only brought in at a later stage to "lend celebrity to the show." Snyder, who did not return a phone call for comment Friday, told Pitman he believed Bunick sued Lopez and sought a deposition "for tactical reasons, in an apparent attempt to obtain some perceived leverage by targeting and harassing a celebrity in a case where she has no meaningful testimony to give and no legitimate reason for being named as a defendant in the first place." Sheldon Farber, a lawyer for Bunick, shot back his own letter to the court saying Lopez was a proper defendant. "Her celebrity is not a shield for her to use to avoid direct testimony in a case in which she has not been named frivolously," Farber wrote. "I am unaware that one of the perks of fame is protection from legal process. She may be inconvenienced by an appearance at a deposition. I can assure the court that I will not ask for her autograph." The lawsuit in Manhattan sought unspecified monetary damages and an injunction barring further broadcasting of "South Beach," which has been canceled. Lopez is among six defendants, including UPN and CBS Television, the companies that broadcast "South Beach." UPN was a division of CBS Television Stations Group and has since merged with the also-struggling WB to form CW, a 50-50 venture between CBS Corp. and Warner Bros. Entertainment. |
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