‘The Rock played an actual fairy.’: Terrence Howard BACKS Katt Williams And Reveals Why He Left Hollywood – FULL DETAILS BELOW | HO

‘The Rock played an actual fairy.’: Terrence Howard BACKS Katt Williams And Reveals Why He Left Hollywood – FULL DETAILS BELOW 

Terrence Howard BACKS Katt Williams And REVEALS The Truth About Hollywood

So it looks like Katt Williams gained another supporter and it’s none other than Terrence Howard who is now spilling the tea on how he got fed up with Hollywood trying to put him in a dress…

According to Terrence, Hollywood is really out here trying to strip Black men of their masculinity and he’s throwing shade at the industry, claiming they accused him of being hard to work with just because he wasn’t down for playing certain kinds of roles.

Terrence Howard Claims ‘Empire’ Studio Breached Deal

Terrence Howard has filed a lawsuit against 20th Century Fox Film (now a division of Disney) — and straightforward it is not. The actor seeks unpaid compensation from Empire, the Fox drama that recently completed its sixth and final season. More specifically, the actor appears to be targeting the merchandising of the show.

What makes the case out of the ordinary is the circuitous route that Howard’s attorney Lawrence Townsend goes about in attempting to achieve a bigger pay day. He lavishes attention on one of the show’s logos. (See at bottom.)

Terrence Howard Claims 'Empire' Studio Breached Deal – The Hollywood Reporter

“The image was of Plaintiff and did not, in and of itself, raise a question,” states the complaint before perhaps fatefully continuing, “The Agreement granted all rights to Plaintiff’s name and likeness to Defendant in connection with the Series.”

So if Howard has granted Fox rights, what’s his beef?

The complaint (read here) then adds this interpretation of Howard’s contract: “[A]lthough the Agreement did grant publicity and promotional uses to Defendant, but only if Defendant sought and obtained approval rights to images used, the Agreement did not however permit direct endorsement of goods and services other than the Series.”

Howard says he can’t get a clear answer on royalties for goods bearing his name and image. Ultimately, though, he’s not suing for violation of his publicity rights nor a false endorsement. He’s suing for breach of contract and demands an accounting.

And the complaint (which isn’t very long) further muddies the situation by invoking his work (and deal and another studio’s intellectual property) for a different motion picture. Howard’s complaint states that in the course of an investigation, “it became clear that the image of Plaintiff used for the Logo was derived from a still shot (a precise frame) from the Paramount motion picture Hustle & Flow, taken from recording-session scene where the movie’s theme song, ‘It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp,’ is sung. The still frame was selected, reversed (face looking left, not right), and subjected to CGI that simply distilled the cinematographer’s skilled capture of the head with vibrant light and shadow.”

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