Rihanna, a member of Madonna's Kabbalah cult, knowingly participated in many
incidents of criminal copyright infringement and invasion of privacy, via
commissioned hacking and phone hacking, then proceeded to use protected,
preexisting copyrights that do not belong to her or them.
This is a follow up to the April 13, 2012 Judiciary Report article Rihanna And Madonna's Kabbalah Committed Copyright Infringement In Stealing The Film Battleship. A little over a month ago, the Judiciary Report called for a boycott
of the rip-off film "Battleship" starring faux singer and
definitely-not-an-actress, Rihanna.
The film was released this past weekend and according to Reuters bombed in a
major way. Thank you to all that participated in the boycott. "Battleship" cost
$209,000,000 to make and $100,000,000 to market and studios get less than half
the profits from theater ticket sales. This past weekend, "Battleship" debuted
with a low $24.5 million dollars in ticket sales in North America. In short, the
studio is losing money for its thievery.
Madonna and Rihanna at a Kabbalah function in New York
The studio that released the rip off bought the rights to use the board game
"Battleship" in a film, but they criminally stole my preexisting copyrighted
material and story lines to make the movie, which is a federal offense, felony
and violation of international law.
Even Reuters referred to it as "Battleship," loosely based on the Hasbro
board game" meaning the storyline and script content is not theirs. You can't
criminally take someone else's works and use it without permission. It shows the
kind of arrogance going on in Hollywood, where they deem others have no rights
and other people's property is theirs for the taking. How disgraceful. What a
horrible example of a business sector. But this isn't over and each of you will
be held accountable for your criminal conduct.
STORY SOURCE
"Battleship" bomb may hit studio's profits: analysts
20 May 2012 - Sun May 20, 2012 3:16pm EDT - (Reuters) - "Battleship,"
Universal Picture's big budget science fiction film, is likely to dent the
studio's profits after it opened with lower than forecast ticket sales,
according to analysts.
The film, which Comcast unit Universal has said cost $209 million to produce,
generated $23.4 million in ticket sales at theaters in the U.S. and Canada
during its opening weekend, according to figures compiled by Hollywood.com....
The studio is estimated to have spent more than $100 million to market the
film, standard for large budget films... during the coming weekend,
"Battleship," loosely based on the Hasbro board game...