‘Planet Of The Humans’ Controversial Documentary
Yanked From YouTube - Michael Moore & Jeff Gibbs Blast “Blatant
Censorship”; Now Free On
Vimeo
https://vimeo.com/423114384
https://deadline.com/2020/05/planet-of-the-humans-pulled-youtube-michael-moore-jeff-gibbs-censorship-1202942938/
By
Matthew
Carey -
Matthew
Carey
VIEW ALL - May 26, 2020 11:42am - 72
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EXCLUSIVE, updated with new details, 11:42 AM:
Michael Moore
and
Jeff Gibbs’
controversial documentary
Planet of the
Humans has been removed from
YouTube, where
it was streaming for free a move the pair calls a “blatant act of
censorship.”
EP Moore and writer-producer Gibbs told Deadline they discovered today
that their film, which has racked more than 8.3 million views in a
month-plus, was taken down from YouTube after a copyright claim was
lodged against the documentary over four seconds of footage it
contains.
“This attempt to take down our film and prevent the public from seeing it
is a blatant act of censorship by political critics of
Planet of the
Humans,” Gibbs said in a statement provided exclusively to Deadline
(read it below). “It is a misuse of copyright law to shut down a film
that has opened a serious conversation about how parts of the
environmental movement have gotten into bed with Wall Street and
so-called ‘green capitalists.’ There is absolutely no copyright violation
in my film.”
The four-second clip subject to the copyright right
claim comes 37 minutes into the documentary, in a sequence titled “How
Solar Panels & Wind Turbines Are Made.” The footage shows a mining
operation for rare earth metals, which are used in wind turbine
manufacture. Gibbs says he incorporated the footage under “fair use,” an
exception to copyright law that allows news reporters, producers and
documentary filmmakers limited access to copyrighted material to
illustrate points.
British environmental photographer Toby Smith tweeted over the weekend
that he shot the footage in question for an unrelated documentary
project. In a since-deleted post to his verified Twitter account, Smith
dismissed
Planet of the Humans as “bull-shit” and suggested it was
filled with “endless” copyright infringements in addition to his own
material. He told a British publication it was he who filed the copyright
infringement claim with YouTube.
YouTube automatically notifies content creators of any copyright
infringement accusation lodged against them and provides a dispute
adjudication process. A representative for Moore and Gibbs confirmed the
filmmakers formally contacted YouTube to deny the infringement claim,
citing fair use.
“We are working with YouTube to resolve this issue,” Gibbs wrote in his
statement, “and have the film back up as soon as possible.”
In the meantime, Moore and Gibbs have made their documentary available
for free on the Vimeo streaming platform.
Moore posted
Planet of the Humans to YouTube
on the eve of Earth Day last month. The film argues that purported
“green solutions” to fossil fuels offer a false promise of saving the
planet from environmental collapse caused by global warming,
over-consumption and resource depletion. Gibbs insists the environmental
movement must address population growth and mass consumption if it is to
have any real impact on what he sees as an apocalyptic scenario. The film
also raises questions about possible financial conflicts of interest
among leading environmentalists who back green energy, including former
Vice President Al Gore and Bill McKibben, co-founder of
350.org.
The documentary, especially coming from the unassailably left-wing Moore
and Gibbs and not righ-twing climate-change deniers, was bound to provoke
a strong reaction. Among the environmental champions leading the charge
against
Planet of the Humans has been Josh Fox, the
Oscar-nominated director of
Gasland. Fox led an earlier campaign
on Twitter to get the docu “retracted by its creators and distributors,”
calling the film “shockingly misleading and absurd.”
The effort by Fox triggered its own backlash, with the writers
organization PEN America labeling it attempted censorship. In his
statement to Deadline, Gibbs once against decried any attempt to keep the
film from reaching the public.
Here is Gibbs’ full statement to Deadline:
This attempt to take down our film and prevent the public from seeing it
is a blatant act of censorship by political critics of
Planet of the
Humans. It is a misuse of copyright law to shutdown a film that has
opened a serious conversation about how parts of the environmental
movement have gotten into bed with Wall Street and so-called “green
capitalists.” There is absolutely no copyright violation in my film. This
is just another attempt by the film’s opponents to subvert the right to
free speech.
Opponents of
Planet of the Humans, who do not like its critique of
the failures of the environmental movement, have worked for weeks to have
the film taken down and to block us from appearing on TV and on
livestream. Their efforts to subvert free speech have failed, with nearly
eight and a half million people already viewing the film on YouTube.
These Trumpian tactics are shameful, and their aim to stifle free speech
and prevent people from grappling with the uncomfortable truths exposed
in this film is deeply disturbing.
PEN America, which was founded in 1922 and fights for the free speech of
artists in the U.S. and around the world, came out strongly and denounced
the initial attempt to censor this film, and we hope all champions of
free expression condemn this act of censorship. We are working with
YouTube to resolve this issue and have the film back up as soon as
possible.”