Rapper Bad Bunny sued for $40 million over ex-girlfriend’s voice recording

Rapper Bad Bunny sued for  million over ex-girlfriend’s voice recording


Bad Bunny performs during the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California, February 5, 2023.

Mario Anzuoni | Reuters

Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny is being sued by his ex-girlfriend for more than $40 million over claims he used a recording of her voice without permission or compensation.

Carliz De La Cruz Hernández claims that in 2015, prior to her split with Bad Bunny — whose real name is Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio — and before his rise to international fame, she recorded the phrase “Bad Bunny baby” on her phone.

That voice recording, she says, has been used on two of the Grammy-award winning artist’s songs, his 2017 single “Pa Ti” and the 2022 song “Dos Mil 16.” Both tracks have more than 200 million plays each on Spotify and appear on the chart-topping album “Un Verano Sin Ti”.

According to court documents filed in Puerto Rico earlier this month, De La Cruz said she came up with the phrase and her “distinguishable voice” is being used without her permission. Her lawyers argue Bad Bunny’s use violates Puerto Rico’s “Law of the Right to Own Image.”

“Thousands of people have commented directly on Carliz’s social media networks, as well as every time she goes to a public place, about ‘Bad Bunny, baby,'” the lawsuit states. “This has caused, and currently causes, De La Cruz to feel worried, anguished, intimidated, overwhelmed and anxious.” 

De la Cruz and Bad Bunny dated on and off starting in 2011, according to the lawsuit. She alleges in the court documents that Bad Bunny offered her $2,000 to buy the recording in 2022 but she declined. A deal was never reached and he then went ahead and used the recording without her express permission, according to the lawsuit.

De la Cruz is now seeking at least $40 million.

Bad Bunny, 29, has not publicly addressed the lawsuit. His label, Rimas Entertainment, and his manager, Noah Kamil Assad Byrne, are also named in the suit. CNBC reached out to Rimas Entertainment for comment.

Bad Bunny rose to prominence in 2018 after being featured on the Cardi B chart-topper “I Like It.” He’s since become one of the most prolific hit makers in Latin music and was the most-streamed artist on Spotify for the past three years.

Bad Bunny is set to headline the 2023 Coachella music festival next month.



Source

‘To sustain the ride, they started to dilute it’: How Black Friday became a retail letdown
Business

‘To sustain the ride, they started to dilute it’: How Black Friday became a retail letdown

Black Friday early morning shoppers rush in as the doors are opened at a Walmart store in Fairfax, Virginia, Nov. 28, 2008. Gerald Martineau | The Washington Post | Getty Images Black Friday has long been defined by massive crowds, rock-bottom prices and rabid consumers willing to bite, scratch and claw their way to the […]

Read More
With Trump’s tax bill set to dent giving by the wealthy, can middle-class donors make up the difference?
Business

With Trump’s tax bill set to dent giving by the wealthy, can middle-class donors make up the difference?

A woman puts money into a Salvation Army red kettle outside of Giant Supermarket in Alexandria, Virginia on November 22, 2023. Eric Lee | The Washington Post | Getty Images A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to […]

Read More
TikTok-fueled K-beauty boom triggers a retail race in the U.S.
Business

TikTok-fueled K-beauty boom triggers a retail race in the U.S.

Carly Xie looks over facial mask items at the Face Shop, which specializes in Korean cosmetics, in San Francisco, April 15, 2015. Avila Gonzalez | San Francisco Chronicle | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images On a recent Saturday at an Ulta Beauty store in midtown Manhattan, Denise McCarthy, a mother in her 40s, stood in […]

Read More