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Reply to "Filmaker's accusations against Malia Obama -Inspiration or Plagiarism?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It brings up an interesting conversation about the privileged getting even wealthier off the backs of those less privileged. The woman who may have inspired Malia's work struggles to make a living in the industry. Malia could be unemployed for the rest of her life and will still be wealthy. I think the right thing to do would be to give this woman some credit even if everything was legal.[/quote] I think the interesting nature of the convo plus a touch of grandiosity and self-importance is what got this young filmmaker to accuse Malia Obama of plagiarism. The pattycake device lacks originality AND the storyline of the commercial is different. There is no need for credit. Nike does business with celebrities. The young filmmaker would never have gotten the job because she is not a celebrity. That's how the world works. Her accusations are definitely making people take a look at her work. If it wasn't a famous person involved, she wouldn't have bothered. When she makes her comparison highlights reel it looks way more similar than in finished version. The Lady A controversy troubles me. I don't think there's any harm here. The young filmmaker should devote her efforts to warding off AI, not Malia Obama. AI is great at producing generic themed work. It makes fairly decent poetry on demand. [/quote]
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