女主播拒绝与粉丝“恋爱”,遭公司起诉
Xin Lang Cai Jing·2025-12-03 03:41

Core Viewpoint - The case highlights a contract dispute between a live-streaming host and a talent agency, focusing on the agency's unethical demands and the legal implications of such actions [1][2][5]. Group 1: Contract Details - In June 2023, Ms. Chu signed a one-year talent agency contract requiring her to complete 25 days of effective live streaming each month, with a minimum of 6 hours per day, and produce 21 qualified short videos, earning a guaranteed monthly income of 9,000 yuan plus gift sharing [1][3]. - The contract stipulated that if Ms. Chu terminated the agreement unilaterally, she would incur a significant penalty [1][3]. Group 2: Agency's Actions - In October 2023, the agency began instructing Ms. Chu to create a false "romantic relationship" with fans to solicit gifts, and even accessed her WeChat account to impersonate her in conversations with fans [1][4]. - Despite Ms. Chu's compliance with the contract, the agency deemed her live streams "invalid," severely impacting her income [4][5]. Group 3: Legal Proceedings - The agency filed a lawsuit claiming Ms. Chu breached the contract by stopping her live streams and sought 300,000 yuan in damages and 10,000 yuan in legal fees [1][4]. - Ms. Chu countered that the agency's actions constituted a breach of contract and abuse of rights, as they demanded unethical conduct and invalidated her streams without justification [2][4]. Group 4: Court's Ruling - The court ruled that the agency's demands violated public morals and constituted a fundamental breach of contract, thus Ms. Chu's cessation of streaming was not a breach [2][5]. - The contract had naturally expired before the lawsuit, so the court did not need to rule on its termination, ultimately dismissing all claims from the agency [5].