Charlie Rose Settles With Unpaid Interns

Charlie Rose Making A Large Payout To Unpaid Interns
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NEW YORK, NY - MAY 15: Charlie Rose attends CBS 2013 Upfront Presentation at The Tent at Lincoln Center on May 15, 2013 in New York City. (Photo by Ben Gabbe/Getty Images)

By Amanda Becker

July 1 (Reuters) - PBS talk show host Charlie Rose and his production company will pay roughly $110,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by former unpaid interns, under an agreement approved by a New York state judge.

The victory, another win on the wages front for interns, comes amid a wave of lawsuits that followed a June 11 ruling by a federal judge in Manhattan that former production interns for the 2010 film "Black Swan" were de facto employees of Fox Searchlight Pictures.

In the so-called glamour industries of film, publishing and other media, unpaid internships are standard. The cost-saving practice has spread to other businesses, prompting experts to predict that litigation in more traditional fields could be next.

In the Charlie Rose case, former intern Lucy Bickerton filed a class-action lawsuit in March 2012 alleging that she and other interns of the Charlie Rose Show worked without pay for an average of six hours a day for several of days a week over the course of a semester.

The settlement, approved on Friday, grants each eligible intern who submits a claim form $110 for each week worked up to a maximum of 10 weeks, the average length of an academic semester internship.

Vedder Price attorney Lyle Zuckerman, who represented Charlie Rose, estimated his client would end up paying about $60,000 to former interns and another $50,000 to their attorneys.

In another settlement, fashion designer Norma Kamali agreed this week to settlement terms with a former intern.

Similar lawsuits have been filed in recent weeks by former interns against Atlantic Records, W Magazine, the website Gawker, Fox Soccer Channel and a production company that produces programming for Nickelodeon, among other employers.

"It's very important for the general unpaid internship lawsuit movement," attorney Maurice Pianko said of the Kamali settlement.

Pianko said he could not discuss the terms of the preliminary settlement between Kamali and his client, Erica van Rabenswaay, but he credited the designer for resolving it fairly and quickly.

Pianko founded the group Intern Justice as a vehicle to represent unpaid interns challenging wage violations. He is also handling a lawsuit brought by a former intern against Atlantic Records and Warner Music Group.

In that case, Justin Henry has sued Warner in a New York state court on behalf of company interns from June 2007 to the present. The lawsuit alleges that for more than six months, Henry worked at least seven hours a day, five days a week answering phones, faxing paperwork, filing and picking up lunch for Warner Music employees.

The tasks he was performing meant he was an employee under state law that should be paid minimum wage and overtime, the complaint states.

The Gawker lawsuit was brought by former interns against the website and its founder, Nick Denton, in federal court. They said they "were not paid a single cent" to work at least 15 hours a week performing tasks such as writing posts, editing contributors and moderating online comment sections. The complaint also said that Gawker did not provide the interns with academic or vocational training.

To determine whether interns are interns or employees, both state and federal courts try to decipher whether the primary beneficiary of the internship was the intern or the employer.

The Black Swan case judge cited a 2010 fact sheet published by the U.S. Department of Labor on a six-prong test to determine whether an intern at a for-profit company must be paid. The test was based on a 1947 U.S. Supreme Court case related to railroad workers that established an exception for trainees.

"Menial as it was, their work was essential. The fact they were beginners is irrelevant," U.S. District Judge William Pauley in New York wrote in determining the Fox Searchlight interns should be paid.

Charlie Rose attorney Zuckerman said that other judges, including those in the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, may not apply the test in the same manner as Pauley.

Zuckerman said he and his client "firmly believe" that they met the test for proving it was an educational program that mainly benefited the interns, but, given the size of the settlement, protracted litigation didn't make sense.

"You've got to have a big enough company to fight the fight," Zuckerman said.

A preliminary settlement of the Charlie Rose lawsuit was announced in December 2012. (Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Steve Orlofsky)

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Before You Go

Media Lawsuits
Charlie Rose(01 of11)
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An intern sued Charlie Rose and his show over fair wage allegations. (credit:Getty)
Rachel Maddow(02 of11)
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Radio host and conservative preacher Bradlee Dean sued Maddow and MSNBC, claiming that the host defamed him in a segment. (credit:AP)
Anderson Cooper(03 of11)
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Remember Anderson Cooper's swanky converted New York City firehouse? The CNN anchor was sued over it. Brooklyn-based interior designer Killian O'Brien was working on the home, and filed a lawsuit claiming that she was injured on the job. She said she fell 17 feet through a hole that once held the station's fire pole. (credit:Getty)
Nancy Grace(04 of11)
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Grace was sued after the suicide of a woman who she had interviewed the previous day. The CNN host had questioned the woman about the disappearance of her son, and the woman's family members alleged that the interview caused severe emotional distress. (credit:Getty)
Alex Witt(05 of11)
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Witt was sued by a former friend who alleged that the MSNBC host owed her $65,000.
Ed Schultz(06 of11)
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Schultz was sued for by an NBC employee who claimed that he helped the MSNBC host break into TV and never got the cut he was promised.
Ryan Seacrest(07 of11)
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Seacrest was sued by a woman who claimed she was demeaned and humiliated during the filming of his reality show "Shahs of Sunset." (credit:Getty)
Ann Curry(08 of11)
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Ann Curry and her husband Brian Ross faced a 2006 lawsuit over their Upper West Side home. Neighbors complained about noise and safety issues from construction on the house, and expressed concern that homeless squatters would start fires. (credit:Getty)
Keith Olbermann(09 of11)
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Keith Olbermann was sued by conservative filmmaker James O'Keefe after David Schuster described him as "a convicted felon" and a suspect in a rape allegation made by a former co-worker. (credit:Getty)
Barbara Walters(10 of11)
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Barbara Walters was sued by a woman who claimed that she was defamed in Walters' 2008 autobiography. (credit:Getty)
Oprah Winfrey(11 of11)
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The daytime diva has been sued at least one, two, three and four times. (credit:Getty)