File:Al Murrays Multiple Personality Disorder characters.PNG
Summary
[edit]| Description |
Some of the characters of the television sketch show Al Murray's Multiple Personality Disorder |
|---|---|
| Source |
https://news.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/hi/entertainment/newsid_7912000/7912326.stm |
| Article | |
| Portion used |
Full |
| Low resolution? |
Yes |
| Purpose of use |
The image serves as the primary means of visual identification of the subject (the characters), the subject of public interest and critical commentary, in a way that words alone could not convey. |
| Replaceable? |
Copyrighted promotional image, no free alternative exists. Any substitute that is not a derivative work would fail to convey the meaning intended |
| Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of Al Murray's Multiple Personality Disorder//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Al_Murrays_Multiple_Personality_Disorder_characters.PNGtrue | |
Licensing
[edit]The copyright for it is most likely owned by the company who created the promotional item or the artist who produced the item in question; you must provide evidence of such ownership. Lack of such evidence is grounds for deletion.
It is believed that the use of some images of promotional material to illustrate:
- the person(s), product, event, or subject in question;
- where the image is unrepeatable, i.e. a free image could not be created to replace it;
- on the English-language Wikipedia, hosted on servers in the United States by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation;
qualifies as fair use under Copyright law of the United States. Any other usage of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, might be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Non-free content and Wikipedia:Publicity photos.
Additionally, the copyright holder may have granted permission for use in works such as Wikipedia. However, if they have, this permission likely does not fall under a free license.

Please note that our policy usually considers fair use images of living people that merely show what they look like to be replaceable by free-licensed images and unsuitable for the project. If this is not the case for this image, a rationale must be provided proving that the image provides information beyond simple identification or showing that this image is difficult to replace by a free-licensed equivalent. Commercial third-party reusers of this image should consider whether their use is in violation of the subject's publicity rights.