
LOS ANGELES, USA: Taylor Swift faces a legal hurdle ahead of the Disney+ release of The End of an Era, a six-part docuseries chronicling her record-breaking Eras Tour.
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Florida visual artist Kimberly Marasco has filed a request in federal court for a preliminary injunction to prevent the series from streaming, claiming that Swift, Universal Music Group, and Republic Records copied her poetry in lyrics and imagery across multiple albums, including Lover, Folklore, Midnights, and The Tortured Poets Department.
Marasco argued that releasing the docuseries before her case is resolved would cause “irreparable harm,” as her creative work would become permanently embedded in worldwide media. If granted, the injunction could delay one of the year’s most anticipated releases, set to premiere on December 12.
‼️| Taylor gets creative control and ownership of her unprecedented deal with Disney+ for her new film and docuseries. pic.twitter.com/RCwkF97dSJ
— The Taylor Swift Updates (@theTSupdates) October 14, 2025
U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who has previously handled Marasco’s two lawsuits against Swift, will decide on the motion. Swift’s legal team dismissed the claims, saying, “Marasco’s claims are absurd and legally baseless. Basic themes or words, such as fire or love, cannot be copyrighted.”
This is Marasco’s second lawsuit involving Swift; her earlier claims were dismissed due to service issues or legal insufficiency, with one case closed with prejudice. Experts say the current injunction request is unlikely to succeed, calling it a common strategy in copyright disputes to seek media attention or delay content releases.
do you guys remember this lady who sued taylor because she thinks she copied her work? right now she’s suing disney to stop the end of an era doc… pic.twitter.com/KMDx6OTloU
— Cemo ❤️ (@werentfunny) November 19, 2025
Swift’s Eras Tour has already become a global cultural phenomenon, dominating stadiums and ticket platforms, and the Disney+ docuseries was expected to offer fans a behind-the-scenes look at the historic tour. Legal proceedings now threaten to temporarily pause the series launch.
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Fans and entertainment insiders are closely monitoring the case, which could set a precedent for how copyright claims intersect with high-profile music releases in the streaming era.