Jun 10, 2008 5:55 pm US/Eastern
'Medieval' Paparazzi Laws Could Benefit Brangelina
PARIS (AP) ―
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That could come in handy after the birth of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's twins particularly if they hope to sell rights to the first baby pictures for millions.
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
Perhaps Brangelina chose southern France for its blue skies,
vineyards and the availability of an estate with a moat. But there's
another reason the world's most famous expecting couple was smart to
come here: French law is tough on paparazzi, especially when it comes
to snapping photos of children.
That could come in handy after the birth of Angelina Jolie and Brad
Pitt's twins particularly if they hope to sell rights to the first
baby pictures for millions.
In France, where the Jolie-Pitts are believed to be setting up house
to prepare for the births of children Nos. 5 and 6, other celebrities
have waged war on gossip magazines with relentless, precedent-setting
lawsuits.
Often, the tactic pays: Monaco's royal family grossed $681,120
through lawsuits in France in 2006, the newspaper Le Figaro has
reported. On top of fines, magazines are regularly ordered to slap huge
"mea culpa" notices across their covers.
"This country is medieval in terms of its legislation about printing
information about celebrities," fumed Loic Sellin, editor of glossy
Voici magazine. "It's shameful. Absolutely everything can be considered
an attack on someone's private life."
Case in point: Former presidential candidate Segolene Royal won more
than $12,000 from Paris Match magazine after it ran photos of her
praying in an Italian church.
The lines are blurry and debatable, but there's general agreement on
the need to shield children from the media glare. To avoid lawsuits,
magazines regularly blur out the faces of celebrities' children or
simply pull the photos.
The four Jolie-Pitt children 6-year-old Maddox, 4-year-old Pax,
3-year-old Zahara and 2-year-old Shiloh are an exception, simply
because they have been seen out in public so often.
But if any magazines were to obtain snapshots of Jolie and her
as-yet-unborn twins, two French lawyers say they would counsel them to
blur the babies' faces in most cases. Jolie has said in the past that
the babies are due in August but there has been no further word.
"Let's say she went to the French Open with her children, I would
say, 'she's out in public and knows she'll be seen, there's no reason
to ban the photo,'" said lawyer Daphne Juster, who regularly defends
photographers. "But if she's strolling in the park in sunglasses,
minding her own business, she could say, 'I tried to be discreet, this
is not part of my public life,' and can sue."
Emmanuel Pierrat, who defends both gossip magazines and celebrities,
said he might urge magazines to run photos of the babies snuggling up
against their mother, or turned from the camera, so their faces do not
show. Of course, he says, "some would take the risk anyway."
In which case, he said, there would be an added incentive for Jolie
and Pitt to sue: The couple sold exclusive photos of Shiloh to People
magazine for a reported $4 million and donated the money to charity, a
practice they're likely to duplicate, with rumors brewing of a bidding
war inching toward $10 million this time around.
There is no indication that paparazzi laws played a role in the
actors' decision to settle in the Provence village of Correns, in a
sprawling stone villa with a tile roof and blue shutters.
The town's mayor says they have moved in already, and a helicopter
has been spotted taking off and landing at the site, but it is unclear
if the couple is actually there. Though Pitt has been glimpsed nearby
in Italy and Switzerland, Jolie has remained out of sight since the
Cannes Film Festival in May.
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