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Thread started 08/21/21 3:33am

BartVanHemelen

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Alex Hahn reveals a previously unknown reason why Prince sued fan magazine Uptown in the late 1990s

From https://www.facebook.com/...465765774/ :

.

I'll long remember the conversation I had with one of Prince's attorneys when I represented Uptown Magazine in the suit he had brought against the publication in the late 1990s. That suit is, perhaps justly, remembered as one of the low points in his career-- in essence a suit against his most ardent fans. The attorney told me that Prince felt that Uptown was eroding his ability to tell his story through the autobiography he eventually intended to create. Prince felt that he should have sole control and ownership over his own biographical story, and that a fanzine devoted solely to discussion about him eroded that ownership right.

.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #1 posted 08/21/21 4:34am

antonb

Still a crap reason

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Reply #2 posted 08/21/21 4:41am

coldcoffeeandc
ocacola

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He didn't get on it quick enough sad should've left uptown alone
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Reply #3 posted 08/21/21 5:39am

muleFunk

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Alex Hahn.... the bastion of truth.

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Reply #4 posted 08/21/21 7:18am

eugenius

I assumed that's what the lawsuit was all about -- control of his image. It backfired on him.

Why is it so difficult to upload an avatar?
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Reply #5 posted 08/21/21 7:20am

milesb

What a fantastic magazine Uptown was. Much props and thanks to Per Nilsson and his team. They set the standard for documenting Prince's work.

My password is what
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Reply #6 posted 08/21/21 7:57am

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

Just more controlling BS

As if uptown held that much power

A fanzine vs an autobiography from a famous pop star?

Come on.

Prince was just being a litigious megalomaniac. As per usual.

There are no decent justifications, except that he was feeling shitty,insecure, and wanted to lash out..
At a fanzine actually still interested in him.

Good job!
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Reply #7 posted 08/21/21 8:10am

muleFunk

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The reason for that lawsuit was the bootlegging ( Madhouse ) that Uptown was associated with.

I have damn near every issue of Uptown and I hated it's gone but that's what happened.

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Reply #8 posted 08/21/21 8:11am

love2thenines2
003

This sue has provoked at that time the end of Uptown Mag. and the best Prince Forum until now .....Housequake.org.....Prince was a real hasshole sometimes!
[Edited 8/21/21 8:11am]
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Reply #9 posted 08/21/21 10:38am

OnlyNDaUsa

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Like he said in "Face Down" "Talk to your lawyer but you got no case." But he may be have other causes he could use to go after them.

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #10 posted 08/21/21 12:25pm

TrivialPursuit

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muleFunk said:

The reason for that lawsuit was the bootlegging ( Madhouse ) that Uptown was associated with.


That doesn't seem to be the case at all.

Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking.
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Reply #11 posted 08/21/21 12:31pm

TrivialPursuit

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milesb said:

What a fantastic magazine Uptown was. Much props and thanks to Per Nilsen and his team. They set the standard for documenting Prince's work.


Very true. I think Prince understood that, too. With so much music, and someone documenting it, it had to be a compliment, and it certainly wasn't the first time a fan has done that for an artist's catalog.

DanceMusicSexRomance
is still a book I use for reference. I looked at it yesterday, in fact. I was listening to "Holly Rock" on Originals, and he mentioned "my toy box." That seemed to be some thing with him and Sheila. So I looked to see what was written first - "Holly Rock" or "Toy Box." Which one fed into the other, I wondered.

Sheila did that whole stupid schtick in that SanFran show with a toy box. It was a show killer.

I don't know why people shit on Hahn so much. Wait - I do. Because he put "the fall" in his book title. (eye roll) Prince fans are fragile babies when it comes to criticizing their dude. They can do it, but others can't. It's hypocritical bullshit at its best. He has no reason to lie this issue. He gets no payoff from it.

Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking.
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Reply #12 posted 08/21/21 12:58pm

SantanaMaitrey
a

No, I think it's because Hahn was Uptown's lawyer, so he is not exactly unbiased. And he had a book to sell, so there was a payoff. And what fall? When the book came out, Prince wasn't the superstar that he had been ten years earlier, but he was still recording and touring. He wasn't bankrupt, he wasn't in jail... That's what I would call a fall.
[Edited 8/21/21 12:58pm]
[Edited 8/21/21 13:00pm]
If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am.
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Reply #13 posted 08/21/21 1:28pm

Rimshottbob

Never read Uptown. Never had any interest in fanzines.

Prince's reason makes sense, albeit in his own crazy way.

All those saying he was being crazy, controlling and litigious as he always was, do you even lift?

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Reply #14 posted 08/21/21 1:52pm

BartVanHemelen

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SantanaMaitreya said:

And he had a book to sell, so there was a payoff.

.

The enduring nonsense that there's lotsa money to be earned from writing books about Prince endures.

.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #15 posted 08/21/21 2:10pm

billymeade

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"Prince felt..." = "Londell told him to feel..."
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Reply #16 posted 08/21/21 3:50pm

wonderboy

I was and will always be about the money. Anything solely dedicated to him meant they were potentially making money off his work and he did not approve of it. He failed to realize the value that all of this activity brought to him. I for one would have stooped following him long ago had it not been for some of these unauthorized channels especially bootlegs. There were points in his career that I did not like his current output. Bootlegs, trading and making friends all over the world, fansites like this one and Housequake, kept me plugged in until I connected with his future output which always happened.

I will go to me grave knowing that as far as I am concerned none of this ever took a dollar from him. I still bought ever official release, attended every show when he was reasonably near and always signed up for ever official fan club or website he authorized.

I will always wonder what could have been had he not gone after his core fans the way he did.

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Reply #17 posted 08/21/21 4:51pm

TrivialPursuit

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BartVanHemelen said:

SantanaMaitreya said:

And he had a book to sell, so there was a payoff.

.

The enduring nonsense that there's lotsa money to be earned from writing books about Prince endures.

.


And you've read every single one of them, as to make red ink marks in the margins, and subsequently rant about it on the internet somewhere.

Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking.
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Reply #18 posted 08/21/21 5:57pm

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

If prince had his way he would have even stopped sites like this discussing him. All so he could control his image and story. Something to think about.
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Reply #19 posted 08/21/21 6:09pm

TrivialPursuit

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funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

If prince had his way he would have even stopped sites like this discussing him. All so he could control his image and story. Something to think about.


Yeah, if you're a fascist.

Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking.
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Reply #20 posted 08/21/21 6:32pm

ludwig

milesb said:

What a fantastic magazine Uptown was. Much props and thanks to Per Nilsson and his team. They set the standard for documenting Prince's work.

Per Nielsen

love2thenines2003 said:

This sue has provoked at that time the end of Uptown Mag. and the best Prince Forum until now .....Housequake.org.....Prince was a real hasshole sometimes! [Edited 8/21/21 8:11am]


housequake.com

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Reply #21 posted 08/22/21 1:44am

SantanaMaitrey
a

BartVanHemelen said:



SantanaMaitreya said:



And he had a book to sell, so there was a payoff.

.


The enduring nonsense that there's lotsa money to be earned from writing books about Prince endures.


.


I didn't say lotsa money. But there still was a product hè wanted to sell.
If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am.
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Reply #22 posted 08/22/21 4:40am

BartVanHemelen

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SantanaMaitreya said:


I didn't say lotsa money. But there still was a product hè wanted to sell.

.

I mean, how crazy is it that an author wants his books to be read? What a monster! Quelle conspiracy!

.

You lot invent these ridiculous things and yet nothing you say ever amount to anything, other than proving you're butthurt that someone dared to slightly lift the veil and expose Prince's flaws.

.

"well he was Uptown's lawyer" -- yes he was, so what? All that means he had some inside knowledge and access to much more info than most people and he got to see a lot of the ugly behind the scenes stuff up close.

.

I mean, Prince changed his name to get out from under a fucking contract, a bafflingly infantile bit of reasoning. But what Hahn says here is unbelievable?

.

We already knew that Prince behaved like an asshole to fan publications, the simple fact that so many of them folded after getting into close contact with Prince speaks volumes. What happened to Sevenmag was already pretty bad from what we knew at the time, and years later Vicki revealed the harassment from the Prince camp actually started much earlier than we knew, and was much worse. Or look at how Housequake at some point just couldn't be bothered anymore and gave up after years and years of ill treatment. Controversy magazine, Crystal Ball magazine, The Prince Family,... all these people who spent unimaginable amounts of time and money and effort on supporting Prince -- and they all just called it quits after getting nothing but misery from Prince and his camp.

.

(Now compare that to Nine Inch Nails: a thriving community of fans who've often gone to extreme lengths to support their favorite artist and who've been repayed to support from Trent et al. Just imagine something like https://ninlive.com/ for Prince. Or the extensive amount of work that was put into https://www.nin.wiki/ (which includes for instance explanations for obscure references in songs or lists of recurring phrases and themes etc.). https://nincatalog.com/ . https://www.nintourhistory.com/ .)

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #23 posted 08/22/21 5:15am

muleFunk

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At the end of the story the man had a right to make money off his image and likeness.
I have almost every issue of Uptown and Controversy but I understood why he didn't want others profiting off his likeness.

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Reply #24 posted 08/22/21 6:24am

JorisE73

ludwig said:



milesb said:


What a fantastic magazine Uptown was. Much props and thanks to Per Nilsson and his team. They set the standard for documenting Prince's work.



Per Nielsen



love2thenines2003 said:


This sue has provoked at that time the end of Uptown Mag. and the best Prince Forum until now .....Housequake.org.....Prince was a real hasshole sometimes! [Edited 8/21/21 8:11am]


housequake.com



lol great correction on Nilsen. lol
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Reply #25 posted 08/22/21 7:01am

Rimshottbob

BartVanHemelen said:

SantanaMaitreya said:


I didn't say lotsa money. But there still was a product hè wanted to sell.

.

I mean, how crazy is it that an author wants his books to be read? What a monster! Quelle conspiracy!

.

You lot invent these ridiculous things and yet nothing you say ever amount to anything, other than proving you're butthurt that someone dared to slightly lift the veil and expose Prince's flaws.

.

"well he was Uptown's lawyer" -- yes he was, so what? All that means he had some inside knowledge and access to much more info than most people and he got to see a lot of the ugly behind the scenes stuff up close.

.

I mean, Prince changed his name to get out from under a fucking contract, a bafflingly infantile bit of reasoning. But what Hahn says here is unbelievable?

.

We already knew that Prince behaved like an asshole to fan publications, the simple fact that so many of them folded after getting into close contact with Prince speaks volumes. What happened to Sevenmag was already pretty bad from what we knew at the time, and years later Vicki revealed the harassment from the Prince camp actually started much earlier than we knew, and was much worse. Or look at how Housequake at some point just couldn't be bothered anymore and gave up after years and years of ill treatment. Controversy magazine, Crystal Ball magazine, The Prince Family,... all these people who spent unimaginable amounts of time and money and effort on supporting Prince -- and they all just called it quits after getting nothing but misery from Prince and his camp.

.

(Now compare that to Nine Inch Nails: a thriving community of fans who've often gone to extreme lengths to support their favorite artist and who've been repayed to support from Trent et al. Just imagine something like https://ninlive.com/ for Prince. Or the extensive amount of work that was put into https://www.nin.wiki/ (which includes for instance explanations for obscure references in songs or lists of recurring phrases and themes etc.). https://nincatalog.com/ . https://www.nintourhistory.com/ .)

Just curious, Bart, could we start a thread that lists all the things you do like about Prince?

Or would that be the org's shortest thread ever? lol

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Reply #26 posted 08/22/21 7:28am

ludwig

JorisE73 said:

ludwig said:


housequake.com

lol great correction on Nilsen. lol

Damn! You're right.

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Reply #27 posted 08/22/21 8:37am

OnlyNDaUsa

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muleFunk said:

At the end of the story the man had a right to make money off his image and likeness.
I have almost every issue of Uptown and Controversy but I understood why he didn't want others profiting off his likeness.

Sure he did and the estate does now. But so does anyone else. You can not copyright facts or history. As to his likeness: it gets a little more complicated as the nature of how it is sold comes into play. And some of that is dependant on who owns a given image.

to be protected by copyright it must be in a form that is repoducable.


Andy Warhol violated the copyright of a Prince image when he reproduced a recognisable painting of it... but in that case the victim was not Prince or the estate but the owner of the image Lynn Goldsmith.

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #28 posted 08/22/21 9:36am

SantanaMaitrey
a

BartVanHemelen said:



SantanaMaitreya said:



I didn't say lotsa money. But there still was a product hè wanted to sell.

.


I mean, how crazy is it that an author wants his books to be read? What a monster! Quelle conspiracy!


.


You lot invent these ridiculous things and yet nothing you say ever amount to anything, other than proving you're butthurt that someone dared to slightly lift the veil and expose Prince's flaws.


.


"well he was Uptown's lawyer" -- yes he was, so what? All that means he had some inside knowledge and access to much more info than most people and he got to see a lot of the ugly behind the scenes stuff up close.


.


I mean, Prince changed his name to get out from under a fucking contract, a bafflingly infantile bit of reasoning. But what Hahn says here is unbelievable?


.


We already knew that Prince behaved like an asshole to fan publications, the simple fact that so many of them folded after getting into close contact with Prince speaks volumes. What happened to Sevenmag was already pretty bad from what we knew at the time, and years later Vicki revealed the harassment from the Prince camp actually started much earlier than we knew, and was much worse. Or look at how Housequake at some point just couldn't be bothered anymore and gave up after years and years of ill treatment. Controversy magazine, Crystal Ball magazine, The Prince Family,... all these people who spent unimaginable amounts of time and money and effort on supporting Prince -- and they all just called it quits after getting nothing but misery from Prince and his camp.


.


(Now compare that to Nine Inch Nails: a thriving community of fans who've often gone to extreme lengths to support their favorite artist and who've been repayed to support from Trent et al. Just imagine something like https://ninlive.com/ for Prince. Or the extensive amount of work that was put into https://www.nin.wiki/ (which includes for instance explanations for obscure references in songs or lists of recurring phrases and themes etc.). https://nincatalog.com/ . https://www.nintourhistory.com/ .)


Funny how you always talk about "you lot" as if all orgers lump together to make Prince a Saint and cover up his flaws and you are the only one who points that out. Quelle conspiracy! And you invent quite a few things yourself. You take two sentences that I wrote and then go off on a rant about things that I never said.
If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am.
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Reply #29 posted 08/23/21 12:23pm

tab32792

funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

Just more controlling BS

As if uptown held that much power

A fanzine vs an autobiography from a famous pop star?

Come on.

Prince was just being a litigious megalomaniac. As per usual.

There are no decent justifications, except that he was feeling shitty,insecure, and wanted to lash out..
At a fanzine actually still interested in him.

Good job!



I wonder if you people even like Prince lol him being controlling of his image and likeness as well as his story is his prerogative. The problem isn’t him. It y’all for thinking he owes y’all any and everything. He doesn’t need to justify a thing. I think y’all are more spoiled and bratty than he allegedly was
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Forums > Prince: Music and More > Alex Hahn reveals a previously unknown reason why Prince sued fan magazine Uptown in the late 1990s