The copyright conflict between Insight Productions’ Canada Sings and the Dutch format The Singing Office appears headed to mediation.
Patty Geneste, CEO and president of Amsterdam-based format distributor Absolutely Independent, tells Playback Daily she and Dutch broadcaster NCRV have given Insight and Endemol until Monday to reply to their formal complaint that Canada Sings infringes the copyright of The Singing Office.
Based on that reply, Geneste, who shops the format for The Singing Office internationally, is either looking for Insight to pay for the format rights to produce Canada Sings, or likely agree to have the copyright dispute referred to FRAPA (Format Recognition and Protection Association) for mediation.
“We will wait for their reply. Of course, we have all the scenarios ready. Depending on what they say, we will take our next step, which is difficult to know at this point,” she tells Playback Daily.
John Brunton, head of Insight Productions, earlier told Playback Daily that Canada Sings, which aired on Global Television as a six-parter and has an order for a second season, did not infringe on the copyright of The Singing Office.
Should the copyright disagreement go to mediation, FRAPA will likely appoint two neutral representatives to talk to both parties and view the competing shows, before judging whether or not format plagiarism has taken place.
The increasingly competitive world of international formats has made copyright disputes going to mediation via FRAPA a common occurrence.
Proving in court an unauthorized use of a format by another producer is difficult owing to competing national laws.
And in an industry where the major format players know each other well and constantly do business with one another, preserving your reputation by protecting the integrity of competition reality formats remains a top priority.
Resolving accusations of format plagiarism via FRAPA can also save both parties time and money.
Canada Sings features ordinary Canadians forming glee clubs with co-workers to compete against other workplace teams for a prize of a cash donation to a charity of their choice.
Insight’s Brunton contends the Canadian show was inspired by the success of Fox’s Glee drama.
The Singing Office has two hosts ambushing employees in two separate companies to find singing talent to compete against respective workplaces. The U.S. version was hosted by The Spice Girls’ Mel B. and NSYNC’s Joey Fatone and had contestants vying for a grand prize of $50,000.
“This is a no-brainer for us,” Geneste said of Insight allegedly infringing the copyright on The Singing Office after she recently viewed an episode of the Canadian glee club competition show.