Los-Angeles
Junior Member
What is the name of your state? California, world wide
I am working on a mockumentary (comedy) that pokes fun at a political party. The story is fictional -- an imaginary "what if" the other opposing party were to suddenly disappear, so it's not like a Michael Moore documentary.
I wanted to have a real congress person's Twitter page (calling it Twerker) appear, with them making a post. I would use their public domain photo (all people in office have a public domain photo).
I know that you can't do this with every day people. My question is can these public figure politicians sue over use of their likeness for commercial use?
If so then I guess I'll just use a knock-off name, combining the first and last names of two different politicians so that the audience "gets" which party I'm mocking.
I am working on a mockumentary (comedy) that pokes fun at a political party. The story is fictional -- an imaginary "what if" the other opposing party were to suddenly disappear, so it's not like a Michael Moore documentary.
I wanted to have a real congress person's Twitter page (calling it Twerker) appear, with them making a post. I would use their public domain photo (all people in office have a public domain photo).
I know that you can't do this with every day people. My question is can these public figure politicians sue over use of their likeness for commercial use?
If so then I guess I'll just use a knock-off name, combining the first and last names of two different politicians so that the audience "gets" which party I'm mocking.