Tuesday, October 09, 2007

You can't get pickier with a Kwik Fit fitter

The Performing Rights Society should, in theory, be the good guys - keeping an eye on people using music for public entertainment, making sure that people making money from using recorder works share their take with the artists.

But instead, they've started to take on the look of a cross between Percy Sugden and Tony Soprano, applying the rules with menace and pedantry.

Take, for example, the case of Kwik Fit. Now, if you were at work, and played a radio while you did your work, that's fine. Personal use. If you pump the radio into a waiting room, where the public can enjoy it (or, if it's tuned to Capital, they can at least pretend to.)

However, PRS staff who popped into a Kwik Fit heard the sound of radios bleeding through into the waiting area from where the fitters were working. The music wasn't being played to the public, but since passers-by could hear it, albeit muffled, tinny and at a distance, PRS have brought a legal claim.

Let's hope the courts do the right thing and kick this greedy money-grubbing bid out, otherwise - come next summer - you'll find yourself being hit by a demand for cash because people could hear your car radio while you were stopped at the traffic lights.


3 comments:

ian said...

Dear PRS.

Yesterday, while I was reading my Daily Telegraph on the 7.42 from Tunbridge Wells, my concentration on the crossword was repeatedly disturbed by the muffled sound of some dreadful "music" from some young rapscallions so-called personal stereo. Surely you can act against this unlawful public broadcasting of music.

Yours

Colonel Quentin Windsor (Retd)

Anonymous said...

Pro PRS Comment:

Surely the fitters should be concentrating on their salaried tasks instead of the excessively loud music that 'most' of these tyre/exhaust centres tend to play on their premises.

Maybe this is why the '1 hr' tyre change takes 2/3 hours instead!!

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...
Pro PRS Comment:

Surely the fitters should be concentrating on their salaried tasks instead of the excessively loud music that 'most' of these tyre/exhaust centres tend to play on their premises.

Maybe this is why the '1 hr' tyre change takes 2/3 hours instead!!






Yes, I'm sure they're only working for an hour and spending the other two working out their choreography to the latest Girls Aloud single.



They say that sarcasm is the lowest form of wit, but I don't care, I'm quite fond of it.

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