Robin Thicke is not equivocating. “I know you want it,” the R&B star croons without a shred of irony in “Blurred Lines”, his chart-topper of 2013. His fictitious interlocutor is “a good girl” who, the ...
Robin Thicke's 'Blurred Lines' has been unveiled as the UK's most-downloaded track of all time. The Pharrell Williams-produced song claimed the top spot in the All-time Official Download Chart Top 100 ...
Emily Ratajkowski is alleging that Robin Thicke groped her. The 30-year-old model writes about the alleged incident, which she says took place on the set for the "Blurred Lines" music video in 2013, ...
A jury awarded Marvin Gaye's children nearly $7.4 million Tuesday after determining singers Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams copied their father's music to create "Blurred Lines," the biggest hit ...
“Blurred Lines” wasn’t supposed to be a meaningful song. It was, by design, a trifle: Pharrell, in imperial-superstar mode, goofing off with the white soul singer and textbook sex idiot Robin Thicke ...
'Blurred Lines' is the biggest-selling UK single of 2013 so far, according to The Official Charts Company. Beating Daft Punk's 'Get Lucky' to the top of the Official Top 40 2013 chart, the ...
The artist testified on the second day of the trial, with Pharrell and several members of Marvin Gaye's family present in court. By Austin Siegemund-Broka Robin Thicke Horizontal - H 2013 The “Blurred ...
The music trial of the decade has come to its bitter end. On Monday, a California federal judge ruled once and for all that Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams will indeed have to pay Marvin Gaye’s ...
The scrutiny intensified. A “Law Revue” from the University of New Zealand released a parody called “Defined Lines,” reversing the gender roles of the original to reflect the feminist critique. Lily ...
Robin Thicke and Pharrell have been dealt yet another blow in their years-long battle to prove they did not copy Marvin Gaye. In 2015, the pair lost a lawsuit filed by Gaye’s family that claimed ...
Decisions in copyright cases involving Led Zeppelin and Katy Perry suggest the open season on lawsuits could be coming to a close. By Ben Sisario In the five years since a federal jury decided that ...