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>Same defense attorney had a case where Tom Waits sued Doritos (I think it >was) because they used a "sound alike" for one of their ads. I guess the >defense said that the agency had wanted the sound of someone who Waits had >modeled some of HIS sound on . . . can't remember how that went, but I'm >not >sure that Waits didn't win. Pretty sure Waits won. I remember the ad agency's strategy was to go in armed with Louis Armstrong records, claiming that that's who they were going for and Waits has made a career out of trying to copy him as well (!). Wait's defense was that they had approached him many times with offers that he had turned down, so it was clear they were after him. Someone eventually turned up an internal memo from the ad agency stating more or less, "Since this Waits guy won't co-operate, get someone who sounds exactly like him". Ken R