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Welcome back to What I’m Hearing+, the Michael of Puck’s Jackson 5.
Regular readers know the late King of Pop and his various creative and legal entanglements are a constant fascination for me. Thankfully, Eriq Gardner shares my interest, and today, on the heels of the trailer drop for the setback-plagued Michael movie, he’s here with an in-depth look at how the Jackson estate is handling new criticisms, especially from MJ’s daughter, Paris.
All yours, Eriq…
Discussed in this issue: Blake
Lively, Michael Jackson, James Robinson, Paris Jackson, John Branca, John McClain, Frank Cascio, Mitchell Beckloff, Lucian Grainge, Justin Baldoni, Lewis Liman, Alexandra Shapiro, Antoine Fuqua, Britney Spears, Diddy, and many more…
Not a Puck
member yet? Just click here. Got a news tip or an idea for me? Just reply to this email, text me or message me on Signal at 310-804-3198.
Let’s begin…
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| Eriq Gardner
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- Blake and Baldoni back in court: Brace yourself. Both sides in the Blake Lively–Justin Baldoni legal saga are filing opening summary judgment briefs on Wednesday, which means we’ll finally get a look—albeit likely redacted—at what shook out in discovery: deposition transcripts, crisis P.R. texts, and reactions from adjacent players like Sony, WME, and a few bold-faced names who got caught in the It Ends With
Us crossfire.
In the first phase, I’d had my eye on Baldoni’s side to see whether his claims could survive the skeptical gaze of the court. Short answer: Not really. He technically still has room to appeal, but most of the splashiest claims flopped. His allegation that Lively attempted a coup to take over the film? Judge Lewis Liman called it “hard bargaining,” not extortion. And Liman rejected Baldoni’s argument that The New York Times had defamed
him when it asserted that the director orchestrated a “smear campaign” against Lively in the wake of her reporting to California authorities alleged sexual harassment on set—just opinion, fair reporting, and rhetorical spice. No “actual malice,” no case. As I reported over the summer, it’s increasingly evident from Liman’s rulings that he’s an
institutionalist, disinclined toward theatrics or media battles for their own sake.
This next chapter shifts the spotlight to Lively, particularly her retaliation claim tied to her reporting alleged sexual harassment. She’s leaning into a narrative that Baldoni and his team scrambled to suppress any whiff of impropriety—seeding social media sentiment, pressuring journalists, and intimidating witnesses. The key questions are now: Is there real proof of reputation manipulation by Baldoni
and his P.R. hirelings? And if so, how bad were the damages? (The parties are still duking it out over expert reports, so don’t read too much into that $161 million figure floating around. Not yet, anyway.)
Do I expect summary judgment to resolve everything? No. Will there be a trial? Well, plenty of people in both camps think this whole thing is a bonfire of money, and they’re not wrong. Will Baldoni’s recent hiring of Alexandra Shapiro, the heavyweight appellate
litigator whose clients have included Sam Bankman-Fried and Diddy, make a difference? We’ll see. But we’ve long since passed the exit ramp to rational resolution. - Is your Spotify playlist deceiving you?: A proposed class-action suit against Spotify is claiming that your playlist isn’t simply an algorithmically nudged reflection of your musical tastes. The case, filed by the lawyers at Stephan Zouras, claims that the
company’s supposedly personalized playlists—marketed with tags like “Made Just for You”—are quietly up for sale. Specifically, the complaint targets Discovery Mode, a feature that lets artists boost their songs in user recommendations in exchange for accepting lower royalties. According to the plaintiffs, this “recommendation for hire” model is deceptive, because consumers
think the playlists are based on merit, not money.
Representatives for Spotify have called the lawsuit “riddled with misunderstandings and inaccuracies.” But if the core allegations are true and the service is engaging in a new form of algorithmic payola… does that make it illegal? Not obviously. The F.C.C. has banned payola in traditional broadcasting for decades, but the agency’s reach doesn’t extend to streaming platforms. The complaint tries to get around that constraint by framing
the alleged conduct as consumer deception, arguing that undisclosed pay-for-play causes “informational injury.”
Curiously absent from the complaint? Any mention that Spotify, as a digital platform, likely enjoys First Amendment protections. The plaintiffs claim Spotify’s editorial judgment is corrupted by commercial influence, but even biased curation can qualify as protected speech under existing law. Courts haven’t squarely answered whether algorithmic personalization enjoys the same
level of speech protections as traditional editorial choices, but the Supreme Court has started sniffing around the question. Maybe this case will force the issue. - A perfectly Hollywood non-divorce: Back in his heyday, James Robinson was a pioneer of the indie studio boom. Alongside Joe Roth, he co-founded Morgan Creek and backed a string of iconic hits—Major League, The Last of the Mohicans, Ace
Ventura: Pet Detective, and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, to name a few. But now, at 89, Robinson appears to be facing a financial and legal unraveling.
His wife, Barbara, is seeking to collect a massive debt following a particularly cinematic divorce saga. According to court papers, the couple had each filed for divorce, but ultimately reconciled—on paper, at least. As part of a mediated settlement, they agreed to stay married, with Robinson promising
Barbara a $10 million payment plus revenue from the film company’s library and backend participation from the Exorcist reboot franchise. Unfortunately for Barbara, the Blumhouse-produced Exorcist: Believer tanked at the box office in 2023, and Universal has since bumped the sequel off its release calendar. Last month, Barbara returned to court claiming that James now owes her a staggering $51 million.
Meanwhile, Robinson is entangled in a separate feud with Training
Day and The Equalizer director Antoine Fuqua, who’s currently helming the high-profile Michael biopic. Morgan Creek is suing Fuqua, claiming he defaulted on more than $1.1 million in loans—debts that have ballooned to $3.2 million with interest. Fuqua, in turn, alleges that these “loans” were actually prepayments for future directing work, and that he was misled by Robinson, his longtime friend, into signing agreements that Morgan Creek had no legal basis
for enforcing. A sad situation, obviously, but several entertainment lawyers will probably have a good Christmas.
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More than 15 years after the King of Pop died with millions in debt, his estate
has experienced a remarkable turnaround. But why is a multibillion-dollar business being administered out of a corner of the legal system typically reserved for validating wills, settling debts, and parceling out leftovers?
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Last Thursday, along with 116 million other Americans, I viewed the first official trailer for
Michael, Lionsgate’s $150 million Michael Jackson biopic-musical, directed by Antoine Fuqua and starring Jackson’s nephew Jaafar in the title role. While others parsed the accuracy of Jaafar’s moonwalk, I had a different set of questions, starting with: Why is Jackson’s probate case still open 16 years after his death? Though the estate has become a commercial juggernaut—it has earned $3.5 billion since his death in 2009,
according to Forbes’ 2025 list of “Highest Paid Dead Celebrities”—the legal machinery overseeing the entity has never actually wound down. Also: How exactly did executors John Branca and John McClain end up running a multibillion-dollar global brand out of a corner of the court system typically reserved for validating wills, settling debts, and parceling out leftovers?
Somewhere along the way, administering the estate came to include
underwriting film reshoots and brokering deals with abuse accusers. How did we get here? (Matt shed light on the movie’s third-act quagmire back in January.) One person who’d like answers is Paris Jackson, the star’s 27-year-old daughter, who recently filed an objection in the marathon probate case. She’s challenging “premium
payments for unrecorded attorney time,” as the motion put it—and, more sharply, $625,000 in what she calls “lavish gratuities” paid to law firms like Kinsella Holley and Greenberg Traurig, which have already banked millions for their work. Paris suggests the money wasn’t for services rendered but for services rewarded. She’s also taken issue with a more-than-five-year delay in the estate’s submission of the fees and bonuses.
The response? An astonishing anti-SLAPP motion from the
executors that casts her fee objection as a First Amendment affront—essentially, scolding Paris for daring to second-guess the executors who elevated the Jackson estate from near insolvency to spectacular profitability. “Attorneys do not work for free,” the motion reads. “At the risk of understatement, ordering individuals throughout the country, and across the seas, to perform personal services without pay would violate several basic public policies.”
People close to the situation tell
me that Paris has become frustrated over how the estate is being managed—concerned that a system designed to protect an artist’s legacy has been bent over time toward preserving its own power. Of course, this was the case with Britney Spears, whose conservatorship lumbered on long after the rationale for it had evaporated. Meanwhile, the Jackson probate deserves scrutiny, too. Lately, the executors have been fighting a lawsuit by longtime Jackson associate Frank
Cascio, who’s suing over “life rights” agreements designed to keep him and his siblings quiet about their own allegations of abuse. The executors have countered that Cascio’s money demands merely amount to “extortion” and that such hush deals fall squarely within their “fiduciary obligation to protect and preserve the assets of the Estate for the benefit of its beneficiaries.” Maybe so. But since when does probate include crafting NDAs?
However, the idea that Branca and McClain
are dragging out the probate simply because it benefits them in the short term doesn’t track with what happens after the case finally closes. Once the assets transfer to the trust—as they inevitably will, and, as Paris wants, sooner rather than later—it won’t change who’s in control. Under Jackson’s will, Branca and McClain remain at the helm. The biggest difference is that they’ll operate with even less oversight: no court accountings, no judicial approvals, no public filings.
As one probate veteran put it to me, “If you want to make Branca’s day, let this private estate distribute to the Trust so it can operate out of the public eye. That’s really the only difference.”
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This isn’t the first time the Jackson probate apparatus has faced a judicial reality check. Back in
2022, Branca orchestrated the sale of Jackson’s catalogue to Sony for $600 million. When he sought Judge Mitchell Beckloff’s approval for the blockbuster deal, it triggered a challenge from the singer’s mother, Katherine.
Katherine’s objections were sweeping. She argued that the Sony sale violated a provision in Michael’s will that directed assets be placed into a trust for the benefit of unspecified charities and his three children—Paris,
Prince, and Bigi. She also testified that Michael had told his family before his death that his assets should never be sold. Yet under the Sony arrangement, his heirs were contributing intellectual property to a joint venture with a corporation, not to the trust. In the process, they lost any power to control iconic works like “Thriller,” “Billie Jean,” and “Smooth Criminal.”
The court rejected her arguments. As an appellate panel later ruled, Branca and
McClain were free to convert those assets—songs, royalties, likeness rights—into cash, stock, or whatever else fit their business judgment. But Katherine’s objection had another dimension, which was sealed until recently. She wasn’t just arguing about the authority to sell; she was questioning Branca’s competence in doing so. According to his testimony, Branca never ran the catalogue through a competitive auction, never solicited a bid from Lucian Grainge at
UMG, and bypassed both Warner Music Group and the tech giants—Amazon, Apple—who might have wanted an exclusive. Katherine questioned whether he got fair market value.
So how did Branca prevail? He showed savvy. He might not have brought Sony’s rivals to the table, but he did shop the deal to the hedge fund ecosystem. Hipgnosis floated a valuation around 28 times annual earnings; Primary Wave proposed roughly 24 times. Branca wanted 30—more than the multiples fetched by
Bob Dylan or Bruce Springsteen.
Branca also testified that the estate would benefit from selling while the market was still frothy—a prediction that proved prescient, as music-asset valuations have since cooled. After Katherine filed her challenge, he secured a fairness opinion from Houlihan Lokey supporting the valuation.
All of this persuaded Judge Beckloff, who ruled that the sale orchestrated by Branca was in the best interest of the estate and
its beneficiaries. Beckloff not only praised Branca’s dealmaking, but reaffirmed the extraordinary latitude the executors enjoy. “This is no ordinary probate case,” he told the parties in an oral ruling. “The Estate is not merely about marshaling assets. In an effort to avoid financial meltdown and to secure assets for the benefit of the Estate, the Court authorized the personal representatives to continue to operate Michael Jackson’s businesses about eight months after he died. … What started
out as nothing but debt and substantial ongoing obligations has turned into a $2 billion estate.”
Not everyone would agree that brand management ought to be part of the mandate—after all, it effectively sanctions activity unheard of in the probate world, like bankrolling pricey reshoots of the Lionsgate biopic. But the ruling underscored the sweeping nature of the executors’ discretion—a breadth that makes them nearly impossible to dislodge. Perhaps that’s why some family members have
shifted to targeting fees, hinting at self-dealing. It’s a long shot, but given Beckloff’s prior rulings, it may be the only narrow opening they have left.
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So why is the probate case really still open after 16 years? As readers may recall, the
Jackson estate executors have been locked in a valuation war with the Internal Revenue Service. That dispute, now in its 12th year, centers on the provocative question of how to value a celebrity’s posthumous image and likeness for estate tax purposes. And the issue, of course, has lately grown more consequential as A.I. has made digital resurrection of celebrities profoundly easier.
Branca and McClain scored a major win at trial in 2021, when the United States Tax Court held that the
relevant measure was the value of Jackson’s image at the moment of his death, regardless of any surge in popularity thereafter. Because Jackson died amid scandal, that significantly depressed the number—the judge pegged the value of Jackson’s name and likeness at just $4 million, a fraction of the government’s $161 million ask. (Here’s the
ruling—which, incidentally, included a government expert’s estimation that a theoretical Michael Jackson biopic would produce a $144 million net profit for producers.)
But the executors didn’t come away unscathed— the court determined that Jackson’s song catalogue was worth
more than the executors had claimed. The estate believes the court made a math error—a discrepancy worth roughly $20 million—and filed a motion for reconsideration. That motion has been pending for more than four years. And until estate taxes have been paid, the executors believe they can’t close the probate case.
Some, but not all, of the delay can be attributed to Trump-era government cuts. (After all, the tax authorities received a substantial infusion of resources
under Biden.) The more plausible theory is that the administration of Michael Jackson’s estate has been swallowed by bureaucracy. Judges have rotated, staffers have turned over, institutional memory has eroded, and each passing year makes scheduling more difficult. The probate isn’t still open because of some grand design. It’s trudging along because, like so many things in government, it slipped between the gears and never found its way out.
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Thanks, Eriq. I’ll be back on Thursday.
Matt
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Puck founding partner Matt Belloni takes you inside the business of Hollywood, using exclusive reporting and insight
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