Medicine Hat News

Judge blocks California law on posting actors’ ages

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SAN FRANCISCO A California law that restricts a popular Hollywood website from posting actors’ ages raises First Amendment concerns and does not appear likely to combat age discrimina­tion in the entertainm­ent industry in any meaningful way, a federal judge said Wednesday.

U.S. District Court Judge Vince Chhabria granted IMDb.com’s request to block AB 1687 while the website’s lawsuit challengin­g it winds through the courts.

Chhabria said the law prevented IMDb from publishing factual informatio­n on its public website, and the state had not shown it was necessary to combat age discrimina­tion in Hollywood.

“It’s not clear how preventing one mere website from publishing age informatio­n could meaningful­ly combat discrimina­tion at all,” the judge said.

The law — authored by Assemblyma­n Ian Calderon, D-Whittier — took effect in January and allows actors and other industry profession­als to force IMDb to take down their ages.

IMDb said in court documents it shared the goal of preventing age discrimina­tion, but the law wouldn't achieve that goal and would instead “chill free speech and undermine public access to factual informatio­n.”

The state attorney general’s office has said the Legislatur­e had determined that existing anti-discrimina­tion laws were not enough to eliminate age discrimina­tion in Hollywood. It cited comments by Calderon that actors were concerned that they would be shut out from parts based on age bias.

The state attorney general’s office did not immediatel­y have comment on the ruling.

The law was supported by the Screen Actors GuildAmeri­can Federation of Television and Radio Artists, which said in a statement the ruling simply represente­d an early skirmish in the legal fight.

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