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Time for an update on Woody Allen's lawsuit against clothing retail chain American Apparel for using an unauthorized image of the actor from "Annie Hall" on a billboard.
We don't see a picture of American Apparel CEO Dov Charney next to the Webster's definition of "solopsism," but we suppose it's only a matter of time before the dictionary ...
American Apparel’s billboards were hard to miss when traversing Los Angeles in the 2000s. The ubiquitous ads for the L.A.-based clothing company featured gritty, amateurish photos of seemingly ...
The words “American Apparel” also were on the billboard. Allen’s lawsuit said the billboard falsely implied that Allen sponsored, endorsed or was associated with American Apparel.
Photo: www.la.curbed.comAn American Apparel billboard featuring Woody Allen in "Annie Hall" in Los Angeles is now the subject of a lawsuit. It is to be hoped that the judge in the Woody Allen v.
Woody Allen scored a $5 million payday Monday – and he didn’t even need some Hollywood blockbuster to do it. Allen sued the clothing company for $10 million last year after American Apparel ...
No one who's ever seen a typical American Apparel billboard -- filled, as they usually are, with images of disembodied female torsos and asses -- should be surprised by this breaking news.
"Aren't you going to write about American Apparel's new billboard?" asks a reader, in reference to the latest image to grace Alvarado and Sunset in Echo Park. Given our previous coverage of their ...
As the company's financial situation grows more precarious - stocks slid to an all-time low of 75 cents on Friday, down from a high of almost $14 in 2008, as the company reported debts of $120 ...
I’ve been looking at American Apparel’s advertisements for years now, and I’m still not sure what I think about them. My feelings are another story. I loathe them -- and not just because the ...