A production agreement for a film or television project involves dozens of parties, from producers and directors to talent and distributors, each with competing interests that must be balanced through precise contractual language. A live performance agreement seems simple on the surface but involves liability allocation, rider compliance, cancellation provisions, and merchandising rights that can create significant exposure if not properly addressed. These are not form-fill agreements. Each entertainment contract is a business deal that shapes the creative and financial trajectory of the parties for years, and the quality of the legal representation at the drafting table determines whether the deal serves the client’s interests or constrains them. A Florida entertainment contract lawyer at The Rubin Firm represents musicians, actors, producers, content creators, labels, studios, and entertainment companies throughout the state, bringing industry-specific expertise to every deal.
Your creative career deserves contracts that work for you. Call The Rubin Firm at (772) 283-2004, complete our contact form, or start a live chat.
Recording Contracts
Recording contracts are the foundational agreements of the music industry, and they are among the most commercially significant contracts an artist will ever sign. These agreements govern the relationship between the artist and the record label, defining the obligations of each party and allocating the financial proceeds of the artist’s creative output.
Master recording ownership
Royalty structure
Advances and recoupment
Album commitment
Creative control
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Music Publishing Agreements
Publishing agreements govern the ownership and administration of musical compositions, which are separate from and in addition to the master recordings. A song’s copyright encompasses both the sound recording (the master) and the underlying musical composition (the publishing). Publishing deals determine who owns the composition copyright, how the composition generates revenue through mechanical royalties, performance royalties, synchronization licenses, and print royalties, and how those revenues are split between the songwriter and the publisher. The Rubin Firm negotiates publishing agreements that protect songwriters’ ownership interests and ensure fair compensation from every revenue stream. For more context on copyright ownership, see our copyright protection page.
Film, Television, and Digital Content Production Agreements
Production agreements for film, television, and digital content involve multiple interconnected contracts that allocate creative control, financial participation, distribution rights, and credit among the parties. Key agreements in a production include talent agreements (actors, directors, writers), producer agreements, financing and investment agreements, distribution and sales agency agreements, location agreements, music licensing agreements, and post-production service agreements.
Each of these agreements must work together to create a coherent legal framework for the production. A conflict between the talent agreement and the distribution agreement, for example, could prevent the distributor from exploiting the content in certain territories or media, reducing the commercial value of the project. The Rubin Firm handles both individual agreements within productions and the overall deal architecture, ensuring that all agreements are consistent and that our client’s interests are protected across the entire transaction structure.
Live Performance and Touring Agreements
Live performance agreements govern the relationship between the performing artist and the venue, promoter, or festival organizer. These contracts address compensation (guaranteed fee, percentage of ticket sales, or hybrid), technical and hospitality riders (sound, lighting, staging, dressing room, and catering requirements), merchandising rights (who sells the artist’s merchandise at the venue and how the revenue is split), cancellation and force majeure provisions, liability and insurance requirements, and intellectual property rights (recording, broadcasting, and streaming of the performance). Touring agreements add layers of complexity when multiple venues, promoters, and territories are involved, and the tour support structure, routing, and financial guarantees must be coordinated across the entire tour.
Streaming and Digital Distribution Agreements
The shift from physical sales to streaming and digital distribution has fundamentally changed the economics of the entertainment industry. Streaming platform agreements define how content is delivered to consumers, how revenue is generated and shared, what data the content owner receives, and what exclusivity or windowing restrictions apply. Distribution agreements with aggregators and digital service providers determine the terms on which music, film, and other content reaches platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, Netflix, Amazon, and YouTube.
These agreements involve technical and financial provisions that require specialized knowledge to evaluate. Per-stream rates, minimum guarantees, advances, content delivery requirements, territorial restrictions, and the platform’s right to bundle the content with other offerings all affect the creator’s earnings and the commercial exploitation of their work. The Rubin Firm negotiates streaming and distribution agreements with an understanding of the current market economics and the evolving competitive landscape among platforms.
Union and Guild Considerations
Many segments of the entertainment industry are governed by collective bargaining agreements negotiated by unions and guilds, including SAG-AFTRA (actors, voice performers, recording artists), the Directors Guild of America (DGA), the Writers Guild of America (WGA), the American Federation of Musicians (AFM), and the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE). These agreements establish minimum compensation rates, working conditions, residual payment structures, health and pension benefits, and credit requirements that apply to all productions operating under the union’s jurisdiction. Entertainment contracts must be negotiated with these collective bargaining agreements in mind, because union minimums and requirements may supersede individually negotiated terms, and failure to comply can result in grievances, fines, and restrictions on future production.
Steps to Protect Yourself in Entertainment Contracts
Never sign a standard-form agreement without legal review:
Standard-form entertainment contracts are drafted to benefit the label, studio, or platform, not the talent.
Plan for the long term:
Understand ownership:
Know who will own the masters, the compositions, the content, and the brand elements created under the agreement.
Contact The Rubin Firm:
We draft, review, and negotiate entertainment contracts that protect your creative and financial interests. Call (772) 283-2004.
Audit your royalties:
Why The Rubin Firm for Entertainment Contracts
Industry expertise
Ownership protection
Revenue optimization
Creative freedom
Multi-agreement coordination
Content Creator and Influencer Agreements
The digital content economy has created a new category of entertainment professionals who monetize original content through platforms, brand partnerships, and audience-supported models. Content creators and influencers sign platform partnership agreements, multi-channel network (MCN) agreements, brand sponsorship contracts, merchandise licensing deals, and subscription or membership platform agreements. Each of these contract types involves provisions that are specific to the digital content ecosystem, including platform revenue sharing formulas, content ownership in a multi-platform distribution environment, algorithmic visibility and its impact on contractual performance obligations, and the tension between exclusivity demands and the creator’s need to build audience across multiple platforms.
MCN agreements deserve particular scrutiny, because some MCNs lock creators into long-term exclusive deals with commission structures that may not reflect the value the MCN actually provides. A creator who signs a multi-year MCN agreement at the beginning of their career may find that they are paying significant commissions on revenue they could have earned independently, with no practical ability to exit the relationship. The Rubin Firm reviews MCN agreements, platform deals, and brand partnerships for content creators with the same rigor and industry knowledge we bring to traditional entertainment contracts, because the financial stakes for successful digital creators are every bit as significant as those for traditional entertainers.
Entertainment Contract Disputes and Resolution
Despite the best drafting and negotiation, entertainment contract disputes arise. A label fails to promote an album as promised. A producer does not deliver the final cut by the contractual deadline. A distributor underreports streaming revenue. A venue cancels a show and disputes the cancellation fee. A management company continues to take commissions after the relationship has ended. These disputes can involve breach of contract claims, royalty accounting disputes, intellectual property ownership disagreements, and tortious interference with business relationships.
The resolution mechanism depends on what the contract specifies. Many entertainment agreements include mandatory arbitration clauses, which require disputes to be resolved through private arbitration rather than court litigation. Others specify mediation as a prerequisite to either arbitration or litigation. Some agreements are silent on dispute resolution, defaulting to court litigation in the jurisdiction specified by the governing law provision. The Rubin Firm handles entertainment disputes across all of these forums, from informal negotiation to formal mediation to binding arbitration to federal and state court litigation. We evaluate the dispute resolution provisions in our clients’ existing agreements as part of our initial review, so our clients understand their options before a dispute arises.
The Importance of Sunset Clauses and Reversion Rights
Two of the most valuable provisions in any entertainment contract are sunset clauses and reversion rights. A sunset clause limits the period during which a former manager, agent, or partner continues to receive commissions on deals they were involved in procuring after the relationship has ended. Without a sunset clause, a manager could potentially collect commissions on deals that generate revenue for decades after the management relationship has terminated. Reversion rights provide for the return of creative works (master recordings, compositions, content) to the artist after a specified period or upon the occurrence of a triggering event such as full recoupment of the label’s investment. These provisions must be negotiated at the outset because they are rarely offered voluntarily, and their absence from the original agreement makes them extremely difficult to obtain later. The Rubin Firm prioritizes sunset clauses and reversion rights in every entertainment negotiation because they are essential to protecting our clients’ long-term financial interests and creative autonomy.
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Serving Clients Throughout Florida
The Rubin Firm handles entertainment contracts for musicians, actors, producers, content creators, and entertainment companies throughout Florida, from Stuart and the Treasure Coast to South Florida and statewide.
Referral Partnerships for Entertainment Matters
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Frequently Asked Questions About Entertainment Contracts
Who should own the master recordings?
The artist, whenever possible. Master ownership gives the artist long-term control over the most valuable asset in a recording career. When labels insist on ownership, we negotiate reversion provisions that return ownership to the artist after a specified period or upon recoupment.
What is recoupment and why does it matter?
Recoupment is the process by which a label or studio recovers its investment (advances, recording costs, marketing) from the artist’s royalty earnings before paying royalties. The recoupment formula determines how long it takes for the artist to begin receiving royalty checks, and unfavorable recoupment provisions can delay payment indefinitely.
Do I need a lawyer if I have a manager?
Yes. A manager advises on career strategy and identifies opportunities. A lawyer reviews and negotiates the legal documents, protects your legal rights, and ensures that the written agreements reflect the business terms your manager negotiated.
What are sync licenses?
Synchronization licenses allow a third party to use a musical composition in timed synchronization with visual content, such as a film, television show, commercial, or video game. Sync placements can generate significant income and exposure, and the terms of sync licenses should be carefully negotiated.
How do streaming royalties work?
Streaming platforms pay royalties based on the number of streams, but the per-stream rate varies by platform, territory, subscription tier, and the contractual terms between the label/distributor and the platform. Understanding how these rates flow through to the artist requires analysis of both the distribution agreement and the recording contract.
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Your Creative Career Deserves Contracts That Protect It.
Entertainment contracts shape careers for decades. The Florida entertainment contract lawyers at The Rubin Firm negotiate agreements that protect your creative work, your ownership, and your revenue.
Call (772) 283-2004. Complete our form or chat live.








