It sounds like this story is almost too easy to be true in one setting. A TV show production moves quickly. Plenty of due dates. A song is added to a scene without first making sure the rights are clear. This could be an editor or a coordinator two levels below the person in charge. The show comes on. A lot of people watch. The lawyers then show up.
Getting permission to use music in TV shows has always been a tricky business. Every piece of music used in a production usually needs two different clearances: one for the underlying composition, which includes the lyrics and notes, and another for the sound recording itself. You technically break the law if you miss either one. More often than not, these mistakes are found after the fact or are easily fixed with a licensing fee. But sometimes the oversight gets worse: a song airs in syndication, then in international markets, and finally on streaming platforms. What started out as a small administrative error turns into a real problem.
Cases that settle without a fight are rarely the ones that set the standard for how the music business handles music rights. Queen and David Bowie vs. Vanilla Ice over copyright issues, the Marvin Gaye estate vs. Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams over “Blurred Lines,” and the Rolling Stones claiming all publishing income from The Verve’s “Bitter Sweet Symphony” over a four-second orchestral sample are all important cases that changed the way rights holders and content producers think about the rules. The Blurred Lines verdict alone, which came with a $5 million fine and a 50% royalty share, almost caused panic in the songwriting community. If recording the “feel” of a song was enough to be illegal, then almost no song would be safe.
There is a version of that reckoning on TV. Infringement can happen with hundreds of episodes of a TV show over decades of syndication, while infringement can happen with just one episode of a music release. U.S. copyright law says that people who willfully break the law can be fined up to $150,000 per work. When you multiply that by a long-running show with multiple tracks that break the law, the numbers quickly stop sounding like theory.

What makes the most expensive cases stand out is not that the people involved were careless; most of them weren’t, at least not on purpose. The process for clearance is really complicated. It’s possible for more than one publisher, estate, or record label to have rights to the same song. Each has its own territorial agreements and licensing terms. A deal for a license to broadcast in one country might not cover streaming. A deal for a limited run might not cover rights to show the show in other countries. It’s the kind of system where holes show up not because someone wasn’t paying attention, but because the layers of complexity grow faster than the process of checking them out.
The worst things that can happen can teach us something. The productions that got sued the most often weren’t the ones that didn’t care about music rights at all; they were the ones that thought the question had already been answered higher up the chain. Even though it seems small and reasonable, that assumption is often where things go wrong. If the owner of the rights finds out that their work has been making money for years in places where no license was ever obtained, they probably won’t agree to a quiet retroactive fee. Most of the time, they call their lawyers.
The bigger lesson the music business learned from TV’s most expensive lawsuit is not a big surprise: clearance cannot be an afterthought. The hardest version of that lesson was learned by the productions that moved quickly, got licenses last, and thought deals could be made in the past. Everyone else just watched and changed how they worked to match, which meant adding another level of review, more confirmation emails, and a legal hold on the edit until the paperwork arrived. The process takes longer. It is also the cheapest one by a large amount.
