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Tom Waits Sues Frito-Lay, Says His Voice Appropriated

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From United Press International

Singer Tom Waits testified Thursday that he was shocked, embarrassed, and “angry--very angry,” the first time he heard a corn chip radio jingle that imitated his voice.

“Somebody had studied me a little too close,” Waits said on the third day of what is expected to be a two-week trial in Los Angeles. “It was the equivalent of all the scars, dimples, the lines all being in the same place. . . . It was a little spooky.”

Attorneys for Waits are trying to persuade U.S. District Court jurors of a novel claim: that his voice was illegally impersonated when Frito-Lay Inc. of Plano, Tex., used a sound-alike artist in an ad campaign for a new corn chip, the Salsa Rio Dorito. Waits has asked for at least $4 million from Frito-Lay and its ad agency, Tracey-Locke Inc. of Dallas, because they allegedly damaged his reputation and conducted a false advertising campaign by airing the commercial, which sounds very similar to Waits’ “Step Right Up.”

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Earlier in the trial, Steve Carter, the Texan who sang in the commercial, testified that while doing the commercial, he deliberately tried to copy Waits’ voice.

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