Current:Home > MarketsAuthor Who Inspired Mean Girls Threatens Legal Action Over Lack of Compensation -Elevate Profit Vision
Author Who Inspired Mean Girls Threatens Legal Action Over Lack of Compensation
View
Date:2025-04-19 13:34:51
Rosalind Wiseman isn't a regular writer, she's a cool writer.
And after her book Queen Bees and Wannabes was adapted into the 2004 movie Mean Girls, the 54-year-old says she is considering legal action against Paramount Pictures over what she claims is a lack of compensation.
"We have reached out to Paramount to have things be more equitable," she told the New York Post in an interview published March 17. "For so long, I was so quiet about it, but I just feel like the hypocrisy is too much."
Rosalind said she made just over $400,000 in 2002 after signing a deal to sell her film rights. But after Tina Fey's movie inspired a Broadway musical, which is now being turned into a separate movie, Rosalind says she wants to be supported.
"I think it's fair for me to be able to get compensated in some way for the work that has changed our culture and changed the zeitgeist," she said. "Over the years, Tina's spoken so eloquently about women supporting other women, but it's gotten increasingly clear to me that, in my own personal experience, that's not going to be the experience."
E! News has reached out to Tina and Paramount for comment and has not heard back.
Rosalind first met Tina in 2002 after she signed a development deal with Paramount. The first female head writer on Saturday Night Live asked to buy the film rights to Queen Bees after reading Rosalind's New York Times Magazine cover story.
While Rosalind told the Post she signed away in perpetuity all rights to original motion pictures and derivative works, including musicals and TV projects, in her original contract, she said there was no discussion of any other projects at the time.
"Just because you can doesn't make it right," she said. "Yes, I had a terrible contract, but the movie has made so much money, and they keep recycling my work over and over again."
"We created this thing, Tina took my words, she did an extraordinary job with it," Rosalind continued. "She brought it to life and the material has been used and recycled for the last 20 years. I'm clearly recognized and acknowledged by Tina as the source material, the inspiration. I'm recognized and yet I deserve nothing?"
According to Rosalind, the last time she saw Tina was in April 2018 at the Broadway premiere of Mean Girls.
"What's hard is that they used my name in the Playbill," she said. "And Tina, in her interviews, said I was the inspiration and the source, but there was no payment."
E! News has reached out to Rosalind for additional comment and hasn't heard back.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (2)
Related
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- NFL suspends Seahawks' Eskridge, Chiefs' Omenihu six games for violating conduct policy
- Taiwanese microchip company agrees to more oversight of its Arizona plant construction
- How long does it take for antibiotics to work? It depends, but a full course is required.
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- On a ‘Toxic Tour’ of Curtis Bay in South Baltimore, Visiting Academics and Activists See a Hidden Part of the City
- 2 police officers injured in traffic stop shooting; suspect fatally shot in Orlando
- Washington Capitals sign Tom Wilson to seven-year contract extension
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Person in connection with dancer’s stabbing death at Brooklyn gas station is in custody, police say
Ranking
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Lunchables adding fresh fruit to new snack tray, available in some stores this month
- Charles Ogletree, longtime legal and civil rights scholar at Harvard Law School, dies at 70
- Taylor Swift hugs Kobe Bryant's daughter Bianka during Eras Tour concert
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Taiwanese microchip company agrees to more oversight of its Arizona plant construction
- Wells Fargo customers report missing deposits from their bank accounts
- Thousands enroll in program to fight hepatitis C: This is a silent killer
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Earthquake in eastern China knocks down houses and injures at least 21, but no deaths reported
Man who tried to enter Jewish school with a gun fired twice at a construction worker, police say
Got a data breach alert? Don't ignore it. Here's how to protect your information.
Bodycam footage shows high
Maine woman, 87, fights off home invader, then feeds him in her kitchen
Artificial intelligence is gaining state lawmakers’ attention, and they have a lot of questions
Governments are gathering to talk about the Amazon rainforest. Why is it so important to protect?