Zvi Rosen, ‘Who Framed Mickey Mouse?’

ABSTRACT
In 1998, the United States passed a package of copyright reforms, including the extension of most copyright terms by 20 years. In the news at the time it was derisively called the Mickey Mouse Protection Act, and it was widely noted that it was passed with the expiration of copyright in the first Mickey Mouse cartoon looming. Steamboat Willy be in the public domain as of this conference, and it’s worth asking just how true this story is. I intend to demonstrate that although Disney did indeed want term extension, and lobbied for it, Disney was neither the main nor the driving force behind term extension. Other interests took the lead, and Disney was just one part of a broad coalition with the heirs of songwriters and their advocates taking the lead. This piece explores how we tell stories about the law, the uses of donation and lobbying data in public discourse, and given how Disney’s involvement in the 1998 term extension has become internet lore and a political hot topic again recently, discuss how and why it matters.

Rosen, Zvi S, Who Framed Mickey Mouse? (March 1, 2024). Forthcoming, Kansas Law Review.

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