Selena Y Los Dinos
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Case Study CX005.1 Last revised: February 24, 2014 Selena y los Dinos Justin Ward Selena Quintanilla-Perez was born in Texas on April 16, 1971 into an English-speaking Latino family of Jehovah’s Witnesses.1 Her father, Abraham Quintanilla, Jr. (“Quintanilla”) was an enterprising man who had spent his youth trying to make it in the Texas music scene as manager and member of a band called Los Dinos. Quintanilla took a job at a chemical plant when he settled down, but later left to open his own restaurant. During his (ultimately unsuccessful) effort to keep the struggling business afloat, he had the musically talented nine- year-old Selena perform live music to help attract customers. Although the restaurant failed, Selena continued to perform under the name Selena y los Dinos. She learned to sing in Spanish and began recording with local producers. After the eighth grade, she dropped out of school to pursue her musical career. The band remained in many ways a family affair: Quintanilla (once described as “the ultimate stage father”2) managed the group, her brother A.B. played bass guitar and wrote many of Selena’s songs, and she married the band’s guitarist, Chris Perez. By 1993, Selena was an award-winning Tejano singer and a rising star, having signed a record deal with Capitol/EMI (which had asked Selena to release albums as “Selena,” not “Selena y los Dinos”). She would go on to further musical success and to open a chain of boutique stores called Selena Etc. On February 7, 1993, Selena y los Dinos gave a free concert at Corpus Christi Memorial Coliseum. Quintanilla effectively produced the concert, planning the lighting and stage setup.3 He also arranged for local television station KIII-TV to film the show, entering into an oral agreement with Jay Sanchez, a director at KIII-TV. 4 Before the concert, Sanchez sent Quintanilla a note apparently intended to memorialize their agreement. It said that KIII-TV would use the video on its program “The Domingo Show” (a local music program) and other new shows, and that Quintanilla would be sent a master copy for promotional purposes.5 During the concert, a crew of seven KIII-TV employees filmed the show. Four cameras fed video to a production truck, where Sanchez selected which feed to use at any given time. The show was recorded to videotape. There was evidence that Quintanilla had input into the location of the cameras and suggested specific angles and camera zoom during the show.6 The sound 1 For a detailed popular biography of Selena, see JOE NICK PATOSKI, SELENA: COMO LA FLOR (1996). 2 Id. at 54. 3 Quintanilla v. Tex. Television, Inc., 139 F.3d 494, 497 (5th Cir. 1998). 4 See id. at 495–96. 5 Id. 6 See id. at 497; Quintanilla v. Tex. Television Inc., 3 F. Supp. 2d 747, 752 (S.D. Tex. 1997). _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright © 2013 Justin Ward. This case study was originally written by Justin Ward. It is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License, the terms of which are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/. Selena y los Dinos CX005.1 heard on the video was taken from a mixing console operated by audio technicians hired separately by Quintanilla.7 After the show, Sanchez sent Quintanilla a videotape copy with another note again stating that KIII-TV planned to use the video on the Domingo Show. Ultimately, audio from the Corpus Christi show (recorded separately from the video recording) became Selena’s grammy-winning album Selena Live. Most of the songs performed in the concert had been written by Selena’s bandmates, most notably her brother A.B.. On March 31, 1995, Selena was shot and killed by the woman who had managed Selena’s boutiques (and been president of her fan club) before being discharged for embezzlement. Selena’s death increased her public exposure and boosted her record sales. A motion picture about her life starring Jennifer Lopez in the title role was released in 1997. On March 31, 1996 (the first anniversary of Selena’s death), KIII-TV aired a “Selena Special” that featured portions of the videotape of the concert.8 Quintanilla believed that he and the surviving members of the band should have been consulted prior to the broadcast – and that, in any event, he and the band members were entitled to a share of the revenue earned by KIII-TV from the broadcast. On February 6, 1997, Quintanilla brought suit against KIII-TV (through its parent company, Texas Television, Inc.) in the Southern District of Texas.9 The named plaintiffs included Quintanilla and the songwriters, who were Selena’s siblings and bandmates.10 Questions: (1) What claims might the plaintiffs have asserted? (2) What defenses to those claims might KII-TV have raised? (3) Who would prevail? (4) Who should prevail? 7 See Brief of Appellants at 4, 16, Quintanilla, 139 F.3d 494 (No. 97-40950), 1997 WL 33565719 at *4, *16. KIII- TV pointed to the fact that Sanchez could control microphone levels. Brief of Appellee, Quintanilla, 139 F.3d 494 (No. 97-40950), 1997 WL 33768290 at *8 n.15. 8 Quintanilla, 139 F.3d at 496. 9 Quintanilla, 3 F. Supp. 2d at 750. 10 Quintanilla, 139 F.3d at 496 n.1. .