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President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump delighted guests at the White House with an unexpected and playful moment on the ...
Many things entered the Public Domain on January 1, 2025, including Disney’s first “Silly Symphonies” piece, the “Skeleton Dance.” Now, everyone can use it. 12 other Mickey shorts are ...
It's January, and for people in the US, that means the same thing it's meant every January since 2019: a new batch of previously copyrighted works have entered the public domain.
But, in the U.S., commissioned works including books and other media published between 1924 and 1978 enter the public domain 95 years after they were released, meaning that works published in 1929 ...
“Looking ahead, an exciting new cast of characters will become public domain in the coming years: Betty Boop and Pluto (originally named Rover) in 2026, Goofy in 2028 (originally named Dippy ...
Other notable literary works now in public domain include A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf, A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemmingway, Seven Dials Mystery by Agatha Christie and The Sound and ...
Happy Public Domain Day! Popeye, ‘Rhapsody in Blue,’ ‘The Sound and the Fury’ and Thousands of Other Captivating Creations Are Finally Free for Everyone to Use On January 1, 2025 ...
Movies Popeye, Disney’s Skeleton Dance, and More Hit Public Domain in 2025 Filmmakers working in the ever-expanding genre of public domain horror will soon have even more Mickey Mouse to play with.
The "Girls" singer also told fans that his "girlfriend" was in attendance at a Dublin concert, which McRae attended. Tate McCrae and The Kid LAROI hug in a video shared on Instagram.
Now, once again, a woman has gone viral on social media for dancing at Kolkata airport. She was seen performing to Deepika Padukone's song Lovely from the film Happy New Year.
A dance clip showcasing a woman grooving outside an airport has caused outrage on the internet. Here's how people reacted. In the era of social media, dance videos are more common.
By the mid- to late 2030s, Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman will have entered the public domain—but DC Comics is already preparing to keep a tight hold.