Universal Music Takes Down 50 Cent's Official YouTube Video (original) (raw)

from the how's-that-work-now? dept

Remember how the music labels like to say that everything they do is for the sake of the artists on their label? Yeah. Then remember how Universal Music had 50 Cent’s own personal website declared a pirate site? It seems that UMG quite frequently works against the interests of its artists — both big and small. It’s no secret that 50 Cent and his label (UMG-owned Interscope) are in a state of constant disagreement. But what happens when 50 Cent decides, on Christmas Day, to release his latest “official” video? Universal Music takes it down. 50 Cent’s own YouTube account put up the “official video” for the song “They Burn Me,” but within hours, if you went to that page, you saw the following:

We’ve been hearing lots of similar stories lately of UMG being pretty quick on the trigger to take down videos, even ones that its own artists have been releasing. The label got a lot of attention over the bogus takedown of the MegaUpload video, but it seems like UMG pretty much feels free to take down videos all the time, even those that the artists they’re claiming to “protect” want up.

Filed Under: 50 cent, takedown, video
Companies: interscope, universal music, youtube