Common use of Morals Clause in Contracts

Morals. As a material inducement to enter into this Agreement, the Parties (including the Parties’ respective officers, directors, and senior executives) each agree, covenant, warrant, and represent to the other that, on and after the Effective Date, they will not commit (1) a misdemeanor of moral turpitude that is punishable by a prison term of at least 6 months or a felony (regardless of the length of prison term associated with such offense), or (2) any act which cannot be reasonably cured which can reasonably be considered by contemporary community standards to be immoral, deceptive, scandalous, or obscene that is likely to cause public ridicule or disapproval or otherwise negatively affect the reputation and goodwill associated with the other Party; or which would subject the Programs or the Program-related trademarks to public ridicule or disapproval, or uses thereof which portray (or would reasonably be perceived by the public as portraying) the underlying Biblical material in a derogatory, scandalous or defamatory manner.

Appears in 2 contracts

Sources: Content License Agreement (Angel Studios, Inc.), Content License Agreement (Chosen, LLC)