- This topic has 11 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 7 months ago by Jay.
-
AuthorPosts
-
JayGuest
I’m just now starting to get cue sheets rolling in after years of work and just saw a show I have music on being repeated during a marathon – I get paid for that again right? – just curious and I know it won’t pay my rent but every little bit heps…jay
Art MunsonKeymasterYes, you should.
MichaelLGuestYou should, but there’s no guarantee that even with a cue sheet your PRO will detect the performance. The cue sheet is only half of the puzzle.
JayGuestthanks..on that same note i’ve had a new cue sheet in my PRO account for awhile now but there’s no new royalties associated with it….
“You should, but there’s no guarantee that even with a cue sheet your PRO will detect the performance. The cue sheet is only half of the puzzle” – is this possibly the reason or is it a matter of if the cue sheet is there the royalties will eventually follow?
seems odd my PRO would have the cue sheet and not detect the performance…but then again what the hell do I know 🙂 jay
MichaelLParticipant@Jay …a cue sheet is filed by the production company. It only tells your PRO that a particular piece of music was used, and how much was used, in a particular program. It does not the your PRO where, when or how many times the program aired. The PROs get that data with other methods, including surveys. In some cases, they use third party data. It sounds like your PRO received the cue sheet, but that the performance wasn’t picked up in their survey. It is not uncommon for this to happen, particularly with non-network programming, like cable, or syndicated programming.
MichaelLParticipantSorry it was late….
This sentence should read:
“It does not tell the your PRO where, when or how many times the program aired.”
JayGuestthanks…the show aired in January of this year..should I wait a bit before I call them about something like this? – jay
MichaelLParticipantFirst quarter performances will be paid by BMI on Sept. 21 for writers and publishers, and by ASCAP on Sept 21 for publishers. ASCAP writers’s distribution is October 9.
I’d wait until you see what you get paid.
JayGuestawesome thanks Michael….one MORE question if I could bother you guys again…I just scored a short independent film and created a drone for it I’m pretty happy with..I copyrighted it and submitted it to various libraries but the drone itself is part strange music part strange sounds…should I register something like this with my PRO..I also do sound effects and a little foley stuff and of course that stuff isn’t music so I don’t register those..thanks..jay
johnnyboyGuestYeah, there’s more involved than cue sheets alone (though I’ve always been paid for what appears on cue sheets). Sometimes I even get paid for placements where no cue sheets were turned in (at least they didn’t show up on my member cue sheet page). Most recently ABC promos. No cue sheets, but ASCAP paid.
Good luck Jay!
MichaelLParticipantThe problem is that you don’t know if your being paid enough. It’s easy to see a cue sheet and a corresponding payment and to think everything is cool. What you don’t know, especially in the case of syndicated shows, is if they detected every performance.
JayGuestthanks guys as always this is a very informative place…jay
-
AuthorPosts