It would be a copyright infringement if the advertiser has not paid for the use of the song. Advertisers generally do pay, because they wouldn't want the bad publicity of a court case.
In the U.S.A., the Supreme Court has decided that recording a broadcast TV show is not copyright infringement.
Piracy is a type of copyright infringement. A traditional radio station, for example, would pay a fee to the performing rights organizations for each song played; a pirate radio station operates without a license from the PRO, so artists are not paid when their work is broadcast.
Radio,youtube,live singing,bar
No, unfortunately.
The fleetwoods
The band is Starship.
Well, if you listen to the radio and here a song, then you go to a live concert song by that same singer and it sounds EXACTLY the same way on the radio, the singer is lip singing.
Accessing copyright-protected materials is very simple: you do it every time you read a book, turn on the TV, or listen to the radio.
Labels bribed deejays and radio stations to broadcast certain songs more frequently, resulting in higher copyright royalties for the songwriters.
All sports broadcasts, (radio & televised) are copyright protected and cannot be redistributed without "the express written consent" of the teams involved.
Regina Spektor - Better
you should play a song she likes singing to and play it without saying anything and see if she starts singing along.