3.3 C
New York
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Home Blog Page 9

Hailey Marinovich, Finalist for California State Champs, Commits to Penn State for 2026

0

Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Clovis Swim Club’s Hailey Marinovich has committed to Pennsylvania State University for the fall of 2026.

I am incredibly overjoyed to announce my commitment to continue pursuing my academic and athletic career at Penn State University!! A big thank you to my family, coaches, and friends who have showed continuous support towards me throughout these past years. Also, a special thank you to the coaches at Penn State who have given me this amazing opportunity for my future! Go Nittany Lions!!💙🤍 #WeAre

Marinovich competed in three events at the Speedo Winter Junior Championships in Austin in December. Her top finish came in the 400 IM, where she swam a lifetime best time in 4:24.33. Marinovich also clocked a lifetime best in the 200 backstroke, where she finished 49th in 2:00.95. In addition to those two swims, she finished 90th in 200 IM, stopping the clock in 2:05.31.

Marinovich hails from Fresno, Calif, and represents Clovis West High School. As a junior, Marinovich placed 20th overall in the 200 IM (2:04.92) at the CIF State Championship. A week earlier, she set two of her fastest swims of all time at the Central Section D1 Championships; she clocked her fastest 100 back in 57.04, and her quickest 200 IM in 2:03.18.

In addition to her backstroke and IM skills, Marinovich also holds notable best times in the 100 free from the Speedo Sectionals in Justin in March of 53.33. She set a 200 free best in February in 1:55.35 at the CCS SCY Age Group Championships.

Best Times SCY:

  • 200 IM: 2:03.18
  • 400 IM: 4:24.33
  • 100 Back: 57.04
  • 200 Back: 2:00.95
  • 100 Free: 53.33
  • 200 Free: 1:55.35

The Penn State women finished 12th at the Big Ten Swimming and Diving Championships last season.

Based on her best times, Marinovich would have finished 35th in the 200 back, 40th in the 400 IM, and 52nd in the 200 IM.

There is still a bit of room for Marinovich to make up before she reaches that scoring range for the Nittany Lions.

Penn State begins to address a definite need with Marinovich; in the Big Ten’s last season, Penn State did not score a single point in the 200 back or 400 IM, and only scored 15 points in the 200 IM.

Since December of 2024, Marinovich has dropped six seconds on her 400 IM. Her 200 back has also seen significant improvement, shaving three seconds over two years. If she can replicate that success and improve on those times prior to her debut in Happy Valley, she could continue to build a very promising foundation for a productive collegiate career.

Marinovich joins Sara McNabb, Gabi Abruzzo, Kate Fedor, and Hanna Wilson in the 2026 recruiting class for Penn State.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].

About the Fitter and Faster Swim Tour 

Fitter & Faster Swim Camps feature the most innovative teaching platforms for competitive swimmers of all levels. Camps are produced year-round throughout the USA and Canada. All camps are led by elite swimmers and coaches. Visit fitterandfaster.com to find or request a swim camp near you.

FFT SOCIAL

Instagram – @fitterandfasterswimtour
Facebook – @fitterandfastertour
Twitter – @fitterandfaster

FFT is a SwimSwam partner.

New Device Restores Lost Sense of Smell Through Touch

0

For millions of people, losing their sense of smell quietly reshapes daily life. Meals lose nuance, familiar places feel strangely distant, and critical warning signals like smoke, gas or spoiled food become harder to register. Smell’s deep links to memory and emotion make its absence especially disorienting, and once damaged, the system is notoriously difficult to restore. That challenge has led some researchers to stop asking how to fix smell, and start asking whether its information might reach the brain another way.

Smell loss, or anosmia, affects tens of millions of people worldwide, often following viral infections, head trauma, or neurological disease. Unlike vision or hearing, olfaction depends on fragile neural pathways that connect directly to brain regions involved in emotion and memory. When those pathways are disrupted, the result is not just sensory loss, but a profound change in how people experience the world.

In a study published in Science Advances, researchers explored an alternative strategy that sidesteps the damaged olfactory system entirely. Instead of trying to restore smell itself, they focused on preserving what smell provides: information about the chemical environment around us. In other words, they asked whether perception could be rebuilt by disentangling how odors are detected from how they are experienced.

Their prototype device does exactly that. It separates detection from perception, first capturing odors in the air with an artificial sensing system and translating them into a digital signature. That information is then delivered to the brain through a different sensory channel, one that remains functional even when smell is lost. Rather than activating the olfactory nerve, the system stimulates the trigeminal nerve, a sensory pathway in the nasal cavity responsible for conveying touch, temperature, and irritation.

The stimulation produces a distinct physical sensation inside the nose. Users are not smelling in the traditional sense. Instead, with training, the brain learns to associate specific stimulation patterns with particular odors, allowing people to tell smells apart through sensation rather than scent. In effect, the brain builds a new interpretive map, using touch to stand in for chemical perception.

This approach draws on a concept known as sensory substitution, in which information from a missing or impaired sense is rerouted through a functioning one. The nasal cavity is uniquely suited for this strategy because it houses both systems side by side: the olfactory network for smell and the trigeminal system for somatosensory signals. By leveraging that second pathway, the device offers a way to transmit odor information without relying on the damaged circuitry of smell.

To test the idea, the researchers ran a series of experiments involving 65 participants, including people with normal olfaction and others with partial or complete smell loss. Participants were able to detect odorant molecules using the device, and most could reliably distinguish between different odors. Crucially, the system performed just as well for individuals who could not smell as it did for those who could, suggesting that the trigeminal pathway provides a stable and broadly accessible route for transmitting these signals.

The device does not restore the sensory richness or emotional immediacy of smell, and the researchers are careful not to frame it as a replacement. At this stage, it remains a proof of concept. But it demonstrates something new: that the brain can learn to access chemical information through touch when smell itself is no longer available.

More broadly, the work reflects a shift in how sensory loss might be addressed. Rather than focusing solely on repairing damaged systems, it suggests that perception itself can be rebuilt by translating information across senses.

For people living with anosmia, that reframing offers a quieter form of possibility, not the return of smell, but a new way to engage with the chemical world through learning, adaptation, and experience.

This study was published in the journal Science Advances.

Meeting Scheduled Between President Trump and Venezuela’s María Corina Machado on Thursday

0

Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado will meet President Donald Trump on Thursday, the White House has confirmed.

The visit comes just weeks after Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was seized in Caracas by US forces. But Trump declined to endorse Machado, whose movement claimed victory in 2024’s widely contested elections, as its new leader.

The US instead backed Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro’s former vice-president.

Machado said last week she hoped to thank Trump personally for the action against Maduro and would like to give the Nobel Prize to him. Trump called it “a great honour”, but the Nobel Committee later clarified that it was not transferable.

Earlier, Trump had expressed displeasure over Machado’s decision to accept the Nobel Peace Prize, an honour the president has long coveted.

Asked on Friday whether receiving Machado’s prize might change his view of her role in Venezuela, the president said: “She might be involved in some aspect of it.”

“I will have to speak to her. I think it’s very nice that she wants to come in. And that’s what I understand the reason is,” he said.

Earlier this month, after Maduro’s ouster, Trump had said Machado “doesn’t have the support within, or the respect within, the country”. “She’s a very nice woman, but she doesn’t have the respect,” he said.

The US has so far backed Delcy Rodríguez as Venezuela’s interim president.

Trump describes Rodríguez as an “ally”, and she has not been charged by US officials with any crimes.

“Delcy Rodríguez and her team have been very cooperative with the United States,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday.

But Machado has maintained that her coalition should “absolutely” be in charge of the country.

Machado has said nobody trusted Rodríguez, telling CBS that the interim leader was “one of the main architects… of repression for innocent people” in the South American country.

“Everybody in Venezuela and abroad knows perfectly who she is and the role she has played,” Machado said.

The former legislator, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year, described US military action in Venezuela as “a major step towards restoring prosperity and rule of law and democracy in Venezuela”.

Rodríguez has rebuffed claims by Trump that the US was in charge of Venezuela.

“The Venezuelan government rules our country, and no-one else does,” she said in a televised speech. “There is no external agent governing Venezuela.”

Challenging Client Situation

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Mamdani supports striking nurses in NYC, criticizes hospital executives’ salaries

0

NewsFeed

Nearly 15,000 nurses walked off their jobs at major New York City hospitals on Monday in one of the largest health care strikes in decades. They are demanding higher pay, safer staffing levels and better security measures at hospitals. Mayor Zohran Mamdani visited the nurses on a picket line.

Qwest Corp Files Form S-1 for 7.00% Notes Maturing on April 1, 2052, Due on January 12

0


Form S-1 Qwest Corp 7.00% Notes Exp 1 Apr 2052 For: 12 January

Witnesses recount brutal nationwide crackdown

0

Roja Assadiand

Sarah Namjoo,BBC Persian

Public domain A masked protester stands on a platform above crowds at night in Kaj Square, in north-west Tehran. on 9 January 2026. They are holding a black and white photo above his head of the last shah's son, Reza Pahlavi. Light from buildings, streetlamps and shop fronts are illuminating the area. The protester's mask is black with a white mark on the front, with three holes cut out for their eyes, mouse and nose.Public domain

A protester holds up a picture of crown prince Reza Pahlavi in Kaj Square, north-western Tehran on Friday

“I saw it with my own eyes – they fired directly into lines of protesters, and people fell where they stood.”

Omid’s voice was shaking as he spoke, fearful of being traced. Breaking the wall of silence between Iran and the rest of the world takes immense courage, given the risk of reprisals by the authorities.

Omid, in his early 40s and whose name we have changed for his safety, has been protesting on the streets of a small city in southern Iran over the past few days against worsening economic hardship.

He said security forces had opened fire at unarmed protesters in his city with Kalashnikov-style assault rifles.

“We are fighting a brutal regime with empty hands,” he said.

The BBC has received similar accounts of the crackdown by security forces following the widespread protests across the country last week.

Since then, internet access has been cut by the authorities, making reporting from Iran more difficult than ever. BBC Persian is banned from reporting inside Iran by the government.

One of the largest nationwide anti-government protests took place on Thursday, the twelfth night of demonstrations. Many people appear to have joined the protests on Thursday and Friday after calls from Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the last shah of Iran who was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The following day, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said: “The Islamic Republic will not back down.” It appears that the worst bloodshed occurred after that warning as security forces and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps take their orders from him.

Iranian authorities accused the US and Israel of fomenting trouble and condemned “terrorist actions”, state media reported.

A young woman from Tehran said last Thursday felt like “the day of judgement”.

“Even remote neighbourhoods of Tehran were packed with protesters – places you wouldn’t believe,” she said.

“But on Friday, security forces only killed and killed and killed. Seeing it with my own eyes made me so unwell that I completely lost morale. Friday was a bloody day.”

She said that, after Friday’s killings, people were afraid to go out and that many were now chanting from alleys and inside their homes.

Tehran was a battlefield, she said, with protesters and security forces taking positions and cover on the streets.

But she added: “In war, both sides have weapons. Here, people only chant and get killed. It is a one-sided war.”

Mortuary videos shows violent government crackdown in Iran

Eyewitnesses in Fardis, a city just to the west of Tehran, said that on Friday, members of the paramilitary Basij force under the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) suddenly attacked protesters after hours without a police presence on the streets.

The forces, who were in uniform and riding motorcycles, fired live ammunition directly at protesters, according to the witnesses. Unmarked cars were also driven into alleys, with occupants shooting at residents who were not involved in the protests, they said.

“Two or three people were killed in every alley,” one witness alleged.

Those who have given accounts to BBC Persian say the reality inside Iran is hard for the outside world to imagine, and the death toll reported by international media so far only represents a fraction of their own estimates.

International news outlets are not allowed to work freely inside Iran and they are mostly relying on Iranian human rights groups who are active outside the country. On Monday the Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO) said at least 648 protesters in Iran had been killed, including nine people under the age of 18.

Some local sources and eyewitnesses report very high numbers of people killed across different cities, ranging from several hundreds to thousands.

The BBC is currently unable to independently verify these figures and, so far, Iranian authorities have not provided official or transparent statistics on the number of deaths of protesters.

However, Iranian media has reported that 100 security personnel had been killed during the protests, saying that protesters – whom they refer to as “rioters” – set fire to dozens of mosques and banks in various cities.

Eyewitness image A large group of people gather in front of buildings in Babol. Someone near the camera has their hands in the air. It is after dark and lights from buildings illuminater the area.Eyewitness image

Footage posted on Thursday showed large crowds in Babol, northern Iran

Eyewitness image A man cstands on the top of a statue with the Iranian flag flying. The statue represents a man
Eyewitness image

Images posted on Thursday from Khorramabad in western Iran showed a man holding Iran’s pre-revolutionary flag

Videos verified by BBC Persian’s fact-checking team also show police vehicles and some government buildings being set alight in different locations during the protests.

Testimonies and video sent to BBC Persian are mainly from larger cities such as Tehran, nearby Karaj, Rasht in the north, Mashhad in the north-east, and Shiraz in the south. These areas have greater access to the internet via the Starlink satellite network.

Information from small towns – where many early casualties occurred – is scarce as their access to Starlink is very limited.

But the volume, consistency, and similarity of the accounts received from various cities point to the severity of the crackdown and the widespread use of lethal violence.

Nurses and medics who spoke to the BBC said they had seen numerous dead bodies and injured protesters.

They reported that hospitals in many cities had been overwhelmed and were unable to treat those with severe injuries, especially to the head and eyes. Some witnesses reported bodies “stacked on top of each other” and not handed over to families.

Eyewitness image / Reuters Protesters gathered in front of burning vehicles in Tehran at night in video released on 9 January 2026. Thick black smoke billows from the hulks of several burning cars with a large vehicle in the background. Around a dozen people are in the foreground. Lights from buildings are in the background.
Eyewitness image / Reuters

Footage from Tehran that emerged on Friday showed cars ablaze

Graphic videos published on the activist-run Telegram channel Vahid Online on Sunday showed a large number of bodies at the Kahrizak Forensic Medical Centre in Tehran, with many families either mourning or attempting to identify the corpses.

In one of the videos apparently from Kahrizak, a photo of a body relatives are seen looking at the photos of unidentified bodies displayed on a screen.

Many bodies in black bags were visible in the facility and on the street outside, only some of which seem to have been identified.

One video showed the inside of a warehouse containing several bodies, while another showed a truck being unloaded with people removing corpses from it.

A mortuary worker in a cemetery in Mashhad said that before sunrise on Friday morning between 180 and 200 bodies with severe head injuries were brought in and buried immediately.

A source in Rasht told BBC Persian that 70 bodies of protesters were transferred to a hospital mortuary in the city on Thursday. According to the source, security forces demanded “payment for bullets” before releasing bodies to families.

At the same time, a medical staff member at a hospital in eastern Tehran told BBC Persian that on Thursday, around 40 bodies were brought there the same day. The hospital’s name has been withheld to protect the identity of the medic.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres said on Sunday that he was “shocked by reports of violence and excessive use of force by the Iranian authorities against protesters resulting in deaths and injuries in recent days”.

“I want to emphasise that regardless of the death toll, the use of lethal force by security forces is concerning,” Mai Sato, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, told BBC Persian.

Paramount retaliates against Warner Bros. bid with proxy fight for board seats

0

In a dramatic escalation of Hollywood’s latest takeover brawl, Paramount Skydance said Monday it will launch a proxy fight at Warner Bros. Discovery and sue in Delaware to pry loose more details about the company’s pending deal with Netflix—moves aimed at derailing that transaction and advancing its own hostile, all‑cash offer.

Paramount Skydance plans to nominate its own slate of directors for election at Warner Bros. Discovery’s 2026 annual meeting and to urge shareholders to vote against the Netflix agreement if WBD calls a special or early meeting to approve it. The strategy is designed to reshape the board that twice rejected Paramount’s bid and to rally investors behind a rival deal Ellison insists is superior on both value and risk.

“WBD has provided increasingly novel reasons for avoiding a transaction with Paramount, but what it has never said, because it cannot, is that the Netflix transaction is financially superior to our actual offer,” Paramount CEO David Ellison wrote in a letter to Warner shareholders.

At the same time, Paramount has filed a lawsuit in Delaware Chancery Court seeking to force Warner Bros. Discovery to disclose more information about how it valued the Netflix transaction and the planned spin-off of WBD’s global cable networks into a separate public company. Paramount argues that without those details—particularly around the treatment of debt and the board’s “risk adjustment” of its $30‑per‑share all‑cash proposal—investors cannot make an informed choice between the two competing paths.​

Competing visions for WBD

Under Paramount Skydance’s hostile bid, the Ellison‑led company is offering $30 in cash for every Warner Bros. Discovery share, seeking to acquire the entire company, including networks such as CNN and TNT, at a valuation of roughly $108 billion that contemplates assuming or addressing about $87 billion of WBD debt. Warner Bros. Discovery’s board has rejected that offer as inadequate and overly leveraged, arguing it is not “even comparable” to the Netflix proposal.​

Netflix, by contrast, has agreed to buy WBD’s film and television studios, HBO and HBO Max in a cash‑and‑stock deal valued at $27.75 per WBD share, implying about $72 billion in equity value and $82.7 billion in enterprise value, while leaving the legacy cable networks behind as a stand‑alone public company. Warner Bros. Discovery’s board has endorsed that transaction and urged shareholders to back it, positioning the Netflix tie‑up as a cleaner, lower‑risk way to reshape the company for the streaming era.​

What the proxy fight means for investors

A proxy contest would give Paramount an opportunity to ask Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders to oust some or all incumbent directors at the 2026 annual meeting and replace them with nominees more open to engaging on its offer. Paramount has said those directors, if elected, would “in accordance with their fiduciary duties” use WBD’s rights under the Netflix agreement to revisit its bid and potentially steer the company into a transaction with Paramount instead.​

If Warner Bros. Discovery convenes a shareholder vote on the Netflix deal before that meeting, Paramount has pledged to solicit proxies against approving the agreement, effectively turning the vote into an early referendum on which transaction shareholders prefer. Governance and investor‑relations experts say that dynamic shifts more of the leverage from the boardroom to the shareholder base, particularly if investors view the choice as a trade‑off between headline price and execution risk.​

A Netflix spokesperson declined to comment when contacted by Fortune.

Legal pressure on disclosure

In its Delaware complaint and in Ellison’s letter to WBD investors, Paramount contends that Warner Bros. Discovery has failed to provide the “customary” financial disclosure expected when a board recommends a transaction or issues a Schedule 14D‑9 response in the face of a competing tender offer. The suit says WBD has not spelled out how it valued the Netflix package versus the residual “stub” equity in the spun‑off networks, or how the purchase‑price adjustments for debt and other liabilities affect the real economics for shareholders.​

Ellison argues that Delaware law requires boards to give shareholders enough information to make fully informed investment decisions when they are asked to tender shares or vote on a deal, and that WBD has fallen short of that standard. Paramount is asking the court to compel Warner Bros. Discovery to fill in those gaps before Netflix’s offer period expires, which would give investors a clearer basis on which to compare the rival transactions.​

What’s next

Warner Bros. Discovery has so far stood by its endorsement of the Netflix transaction and has continued to reject Paramount’s advances, setting up what could be a prolonged fight stretching from the courtroom to the annual meeting. Paramount, for its part, is signaling that it and the Ellison family are prepared to stay in the fight, betting that more disclosure and mounting shareholder scrutiny will eventually tilt the balance in favor of its all‑cash bid.

Greenland stands firm against US takeover, refuses under ‘any circumstance’ | Latest on Donald Trump

0

Self-governed Danish territory says that NATO is in charge of defence of the island and that it will not accept US takeover.

The government of Greenland has firmly rejected threats from United States President Donald Trump, stating that it will not accept a US takeover under “any circumstance”.

The self-governed Danish territory also underscored its NATO membership in a statement on Monday, saying that the territory’s defence falls to the transatlantic alliance.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

“The United States has once again reiterated its desire to take over Greenland. This is something that the governing coalition in Greenland cannot accept under any circumstance,” said the island’s coalition government.

“As part of the Danish commonwealth, Greenland is a member of NATO, and the defence of Greenland must therefore be through NATO,” it added.

Trump has continued to insist that he will seize Greenland, threatening that the territory will be brought under US control “one way or another”. Those threats have sparked outrage from European allies who have warned that any takeover of Greenland would have serious repercussions for ties between the US and Europe.

Last week, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and the United Kingdom issued a statement expressing support for Copenhagen and Greenland amid US threats.

Trump has said that if the US does not control Greenland, where it already has a military base, it will be subject to greater influence from countries such as Russia and China.

European leaders have expressed hope that greater security cooperation in the Arctic may help placate Trump. The US president has continued to insist that the US must “own” Greenland despite offers of further steps to address US concerns.

Trump has wielded US military power around the world with few concerns for international law, striking Venezuela and abducting its President Nicolas Maduro earlier this month and making further threats against countries such as Iran, Colombia, and Mexico.

“All allies agree on the importance of the Arctic and Arctic security,” NATO chief Mark Rutte said during a press conference in Croatia on Monday. “With sea lanes opening up, there is a risk that the Russians and the Chinese will be more active.”

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Monday that the US should not use China as a “pretext” for pursuing its own interests.

“The rights and freedoms of all countries to conduct activities in the Arctic in accordance with the law should be fully respected,” spokesperson Mao Ning said during a briefing, without explicitly mentioning Greenland. “The US should not pursue its own interests by using other countries as a pretext.”

Los Lobos files lawsuit against Sony Music for unpaid royalties from ‘La Bamba’ and ‘Desperado’

0

East L.A. rock group Los Lobos have filed two lawsuits against Sony, claiming the band was underpaid royalties on the songs they recorded for the La Bamba and Desperado soundtracks.

Between them, the lawsuits ask for between $1.5 million and $2.75 million in compensation. They were filed in California state court late last year, and only came to light when one of the suits was transferred to a federal court on Friday (January 9).

That lawsuit names Sony Music Entertainment and its label Milan Entertainment as defendants, and centers on Canción del Mariachi, a song Los Lobos recorded for the 1995 Antonio Banderas film Desperado.

The song was used as the opening track for the movie, and appeared on both the Desperado soundtrack and in a 2004 compilation soundtrack of all the Mariachi movies, titled Mexico and the Mariachis, released by Milan Entertainment. Milan was acquired by Sony Masterworks in 2019. The song has been available via that soundtrack on streaming since 2018.

“Plaintiffs’ representatives have recently discovered that neither Sony, nor Milan, or any other Sony-related entity has ever accounted to Los Lobos for any digital streaming of the recording in any country, territory, or place, for any streaming, at any time, for any royalty period,” states the complaint, which can be read in full here.

“Neither Sony, nor Milan, or any other Sony-related entity has ever accounted to Los Lobos for any digital streaming of the recording in any country, territory, or place, for any streaming, at any time, for any royalty period.”

Los Lobos, in a complaint against Sony

This failure to account for the song’s streams became “even more egregious” in recent years when Canción del Mariachi gained new fans after UFC fighter Ilia “El Matador” Topuria began using it as his “walkout” song or “anthem,” the complaint states. It alleges Sony was aware of the song’s resurgent popularity, as it had the title changed to Canción del Mariachi (Ilia Topuria ‘El Matador’ Anthem).

Given that Los Lobos’ recording contract gave the band 24% of net revenue on the song, the band estimates they are owed between $500,000 and $750,000 for the more than 600 million streams the song has garnered. The complaint asks the court for a complete accounting of the royalties owed on the track.

It also states that Los Lobos have reason to believe the recording was licensed for use on television, for which the band never received royalties.

Sony Music declined to comment.

The other lawsuit names Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony-owned Columbia Pictures as defendants, and alleges that members of Los Lobos – David Hidalgo, Louie Perez, Cesar Rosas, Conrad Lozano, and Steve Berlin – were never paid royalties for streams outside the US and Canada for their 1987 cover of La Bamba.

Los Lobos recorded the song for a biopic of rocker Ritchie Valens, also titled La Bamba. Valens died in 1959 in a plane crash in Iowa that also killed Buddy Holly and ‘Big Bopper’ J.P. Richardson. Valens had originally recorded La Bamba, which he had adapted from a Mexican folk song.

Los Lobos’ version of the song became an international hit, reaching No. 1 on the charts in 15 countries, according to the complaint as cited by Rolling Stone, and spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Despite the song’s international success, “plaintiff’s representatives have recently discovered that no royalties for streaming exploitation of the recordings have ever been paid to Los Lobos for any country outside of the United States and Canada,” stated the complaint, as quoted by Billboard. The complaint describes that as a “massive deficiency.”

The complaint says Sony is responsible for the underpayment because it handles non-US and Canada royalty accounting for the La Bamba soundtrack. It estimates the back royalties owed run between $1 million and $2 million.

Los Lobos was formed in East Los Angeles in 1973 and came to prominence with La Bamba in 1987. They have recorded 17 studio albums, including most recently 2021’s Native Sons, and have been nominated for 12 Grammy awards, winning four.

 Music Business Worldwide