Marin Independent Journal

Producers dealt new blow in fight over hit TV show

- By Anousha Sakoui

LOS ANGELES >> A Los Angeles judge has dealt another blow to producers of “The Walking Dead” who have been fighting for years for a greater slice of the hit zombie show's profits from its distributo­r AMC Networks.

L.A. County Superior Court Judge Daniel Buckley, who has presided over the case for the last five years, on Wednesday dismissed most of the claims by the producers that AMC had cheated them out of hundreds of millions in profits from the series and its spinoffs.

The decision is the latest in years of fighting over the fortune generated by the series based on Robert Kirkman's comics. Kirkman is among the group of producers suing AMC over profits from the hit series.

“This is the second time the court has thrown out the plaintiffs' main claims, and rejected their attempt to rewrite their contracts in search of an unjustifie­d windfall,” AMC's attorney Orin Snyder said in a statement.

Attorney Sheldon Eisenberg, who is representi­ng producers, said they will appeal the decision.

“The Court's legally inexplicab­le ruling dismissing as a matter of law Plaintiffs' claims based on AMC's bad faith has only compounded the previous errors made by Judge Buckley in dismissing the express contract claims in 2020.”

The case has been closely watched for insights into the murky world of Hollywood financing and is part of a wave of battles between creators and distributo­rs over profits as streaming become the dominant mode of distributi­on.

Last summer, AMC agreed to a $200 million settlement with the first showrunner of “The Walking Dead,” Frank Darabont, and Creative Artists Agency over streaming revenue from the series.

Darabont sued AMC in 2013 after being fired from the show and alleged that the network deprived him of millions in profits through improper and abusive “self-dealing.”

As Hollywood's major studios have created their own streaming platforms, self dealing has become a bigger threat to show creators, a situation where studios make a show and rather than have a wide field of bidders for the distributi­on rights, cut more advantageo­us deals with their own streaming platforms.

 ?? AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Robert Kirkman, creator of “The Walking Dead” and “Outcast” comic book series and TV shows, at his Skybound Studio in Los Angeles.
AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Robert Kirkman, creator of “The Walking Dead” and “Outcast” comic book series and TV shows, at his Skybound Studio in Los Angeles.

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