The Facts Speak For Themselves

Based on information and belief, it appears that Billy Ray Cyrus used the movie script I sent him in 2011 (at Billy Ray's and his then manager's request) entitled "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me," as the inspiration for his new Country Music Television (CMT) sitcom called, "Still The King," about - you guessed it - a former Elvis Presley impersonator.

Unfortunately, Billy Ray never bothered to get my permission, never paid me for the idea and claimed sole credit for coming up with the CMT sitcom idea. It appears Billy Ray Cyrus has been a very naughty boy.

TIMELINE:

September 2000:

I wrote and produced a song called, "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me." The song was based on a story I created and wrote about a struggling, alcoholic country musician who after 20 years of going nowhere receives a career boost from an unlikely source: Elvis Presley, an other-worldly figure who turns out to be the musician's father. It's a second chance at life for both of them in their newly found relationship.




In 2010, I wrote a screenplay, a comedy based on the story I created for "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me." Upon completion of the screenplay, I set out to find the perfect country performer who could star in my movie. The performer had to be able to sing as well as act. And his comedic timing had to be finely honed.

I immediately thought of Billy Ray Cyrus as a candidate to star in my film. Billy Ray's musical talents were obvious, and his comedic acting chops were amply demonstrated by his work on the sitcom "Doc" and his daughter Miley's Disney show, "Hannah Montana."

April 2011:

I reached out to Cyrus' then manager, Stuart Dill, in an email asking him if Billy Ray would have any interest in being in the movie. Included in the email was a synopsis for "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me" along with conceptual parameters.

Stuart Dill responded via phone calls and an email saying Billy Ray Cyrus wanted to see the script (see email below). I emailed Dill and Billy Ray Cyrus the script at their request.

For the next three months I repeatedly tried to follow-up with Dill and Cyrus to see how they liked the "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me" screenplay.  But neither Dill nor Cyrus would return my phone calls and/or emails. After three months of attempting to follow-up with Dill and Cyrus, I gave up.

2012:

Just months after receiving my script, Cyrus shot a pilot for “Still The King” in Tennessee, a sitcom featuring Cyrus in the starring role as an Elvis Presley impersonator.

DISSOLVE TO:

April 2015:

CMT announced on Thursday, April 2 it had picked up Cyrus’ sitcom, “Still The King,” which features Cyrus in the starring role as Vernon Brown, an alcoholic one-hit wonder turned Elvis Presley impersonator. When Brown crashes into a church, he’s ordered by a judge to do community service. Instead, Brown pretends to be the church’s new minister to avoid doing the community service. Along the way he discovers he has a 15-year-old daughter. The show is set to debut sometime in early 2016.



Email from former Billy Ray Cyrus' manager requesting my script for "Elvis Came Back to Manage Me"

Dill, Stuart <Stuart.Dill@sanctuarygroup.com>
To: rcplaw@bellsouth.net
Re: Billy Ray Cyrus
Sent:  Tues. April 1, 2011
Diane - per my messages - BRC would like to see a script.

Best,

Stuart Dill 
President-Nashville 
Sanctuary Artist Management 
615-524-7740 Office


From: Diane Archer <rcplaw@bellsouth.net
To: Dill, Stuart 
Sent: Mon Mar 28 19:45:47 2011
Subject: Billy Ray Cyrus 

B”H


Stuart:

My client has developed a film entitled, Elvis Came Back to Manage Me, for which we think Billy Ray Cyrus is perfect for the title role of Charlie Blake.  Although we’re in the very early stages of this project, Mr. Cyrus’ musical and dramatic talents seem to lend themselves perfectly to this film.  As such, we wanted run the opportunity by you to see whether Mr. Cyrus would be interested in a project such as this:

Overview:  While performing at a Fort Lauderdale Moose Lodge, struggling country singer Charlie Blake sees an apparition of Elvis Presley.  Elvis' ghost tells Charlie he's come back to manage him and propel him to stardom.  He gives Charlie songs specially written by Elvis for Charlie.  Apprehensive but willing, Charlie goes into the studio and records the ghost-written tunes.  He also embarks on a cross-country trip to promote the songs, per Elvis' instructions, accompanied by The King himself.  What happens along the way is an epic lesson for Charlie in life and love and the true meaning of happiness... compliments of Elvis.

The movie is a fun-filled, cross-country romp rife with great country music and pop stars, offbeat characters and a story that’ll tickle your funny bone and make you reach for a box of Kleenex.  And, of course, an appearance by The King.
You can hear the scratch track of the title song at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hNIXI70lAo
(vocal will be overdubbed with the voice of a major country and western superstar).
I look forward to hearing from you forthwith.

Sincerely,
Diane Archer
954-302-xxxx (office)
954-xxx-xxxx (cell)

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Billy Ray Cyrus facing charges he stole the idea for his new CMT sitcom






Aricle courtesy of examiner.com
Billy Ray Cyrus, facing charges he stole the idea for his new CMT sitcom, 'Still The King,' speaks to advertisers about the show at the upfronts event in New York.




Billy Ray Cyrus, facing charges he stole the idea for his new CMT sitcom, 'Still The King,' speaks to advertisers about the show at the upfronts event in New York.

Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images for CMT

Country musician Billy Ray Cyrus may soon have an Achy Breaky Heart and an Achy Breaky wallet if allegations that he unlawfully used a Florida screenwriter’s movie script as inspiration for his new Country Music Television (CMT) sitcom are proven true (click here to listen). The details of the allegations, along with the announcement that a lawsuit will be filed were confirmed by examiner.com during a telephone interview on Thursday, April 16 with the writer making the charges.

The allegations against Billy Ray Cyrus stem back to events in 2011 when screenwriter and South Florida political activist Jay Schorr was looking for a performer to star in his newly written movie entitled, “Elvis Came Back to Manage Me.” The comedic movie centers around Elvis Presley, the illegitimate, alcoholic country musician son Elvis didn’t know he had, and a second chance at life for both of them in their newly found relationship.

Schorr says he sent his script to Cyrus back in 2011 at the request of Cyrus’s then manager, Stuart Dill. Schorr provided examiner.com with a copy of the email Dill sent him in which Dill says, "BRC would like to see a script." When Schorr tried to follow-up with Dill to see how Dill and Cyrus liked the script, Schorr says Dill wouldn’t return his emails or phone calls. After attempting for three months to get in touch with Cyrus and Dill, Schorr gave up.

In 2012, just months after receiving Schorr’s script, Cyrus shot a pilot for “Still The King” in Tennessee, a sitcom featuring Cyrus in the starring role as an Elvis Presley impersonator.

Dissolve to April 2015. CMT announced on Thursday, April 2 it had picked up Cyrus’ sitcom, “Still The King,” which features Cyrus in the starring role as Vernon Brown, an alcoholic one-hit wonder turned Elvis Presley impersonator. When Brown crashes into a church, he’s ordered by a judge to do community service. Instead, Brown pretends to be the church’s new minister to avoid doing the community service. Along the way he discovers he has a 15-year-old daughter. The show is set to debut sometime in early 2016.

“When I first heard about Billy Ray Cyrus’ new CMT sitcom, I couldn’t believe that of all the characters he could have used, he chose Elvis Presley!” said Schorr. “And to hear his explanation as to how he allegedly came up with the idea … give me a break!”

The ‘how,’ Cyrus explained at the CMT upfront advertising event in New York earlier this month, is that he was riding on his tour bus when it made a stop for gas on the Gulf Coast. Cyrus got off the bus to walk his dog and thought about how Elvis Presley performed in the region at the start of his career. He also saw a church in the distance, and when he got back on the bus things came together for the CMT sitcom.

According to Schorr, things came together for Cyrus after he read Schorr’s ‘Elvis’ script months before.

“Elvis drove a tour bus in my script!” said an emphatic Schorr. “He also met the son he never knew he had. Yeah, I guess every sitcom idea developed includes an Elvis character and other elements from my script. It’s not like there are any other characters in the entire world that Billy Ray Cyrus could have come up with!”

When contacted by examiner.com about the allegations, Billy Ray Cyrus’ manager, Dave Downey, refused comment. He forwarded this reporter’s questions to Cyrus’ lawyer, Tom Greenberg, a partner in the high-powered Hollywood law firm Del Shaw Moonves Tanaka Finkelstein & Lezcano.

Rather than answer any of this reporter’s questions, Greenberg chose to try to switch the focus of the inquiry to Schorr.

“The most cursory search of Mr. Schorr reveals that he has filed multiple such claims in the past against other parties. We suggest that be the focus of your reporting,” said Greenberg, sounding more like a magician trying to get an audience member to look at his right hand while performing sleight of hand with his left.

The “multiple such claims” alleged by Greenberg turned out to be only one lawsuit which, upon review, actually bolsters Schorr’s credibility. Public records indicate that Schorr filed an idea misappropriation lawsuit in 2009 against Chrysler and its media agencies BBDO and PHD Media. The case was settled out of court for an undisclosed monetary amount. The law firm representing the defendants has a history of not settling nuisance lawsuits.

Having not answered a single one of this reporter’s questions, and after trying to redirect examiner.com’s attention to Schorr rather than address the merits or lack thereof of Schorr’s allegations – a legal tactic common in rape cases where defense lawyers place blame on the victim rather than focus on the accused - Greenberg told examiner.com, “The facts speak for themselves.”

I wasn’t exactly sure as to what facts Greenberg was referring, because he refused to address any facts at all. And if the facts were speaking for themselves, they were speaking in very hushed, imperceptible tones.

Schorr shared with examiner.com a recorded message he sent to Greenberg which Schorr said, “pretty much sums up my position.” The recording begins with a deep-voiced announcer saying, “Billy Ray Cyrus may have been a very naughty boy.” The message asks Cyrus to “come clean” about his sitcom and then admonishes Cyrus with “We all know the truth, Billy Ray. And the truth is ‘Still The King.’”

Billy Ray Cyrus No Stranger to Allegations of Idea Theft

Billy Ray Cyrus was sued in 1993 in U.S. Federal District Court for allegedly stealing the idea for his biggest hit, "Achy Breaky Heart."

The lawsuit, brought by Danny Mote of Winston, Georgia alleged that Cyrus used substantial parts of a song Mote wrote in the 1970s titled "Cryin' Eyes."

Cyrus responded he wrote the song while in his pickup truck, singing into a cassette recorder.

Cyrus also claims that he came up with the idea for "Still The King" while on his tour bus. It seems Cyrus has a propensity for coming up with ideas in moving vehicles!

The lawsuit was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount of money.



*This blog is comprised of fact and opinion; constitutionally protected free speech. The blog does not contain defamatory matter, as truth is an absolute defense to defamation. There is no malicious intent, merely a simple desire to state the truth and opine in good faith based on the irrefutable facts.

Let Billy Ray Cyrus' attorney, Tom Greenberg and the legal braintrust at the Los Angeles law firm of Del, Shaw, Moonves, Tanaka, Finkelstein & Lezcano et al, gnaw on this legal truism before firing off a threatening letter demanding that this blog be taken down.