the risk of death Garcia faces. At most, the expert's bare assertion establishes that granting the requested injunction will have an incremental but impossible-to-measure effect on Garcia's credibility. The declaration notably stops short of suggesting that the injunction would have any impact (let alone a likely impact) on the actions of the necessary audience: the cleric who issued the fatwa and those who would be inclined to carry it out. Nor is it obvious why success in getting the district court to order the film's removal from YouTube would be critical to bolstering the believability of Garcia's message. Demanding the take-down injunction seems to speak loudly and clearly in its own right about the sincerity of her views on the film.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that, on this record, Garcia failed to satisfy the irreparable harm prong. Under our decision in Perfect 10, that alone requires us to affirm the district court's denial of a preliminary injunction. 653 F.3d at 982. I concur in the judgment for that reason only.
KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Garcia's dramatic performance met all of the requirements for copyright protection: It was copyrightable subject matter, it was original and it was fixed at the moment it was recorded. So what happened to the copyright? At times, the majority says that Garcia's performance was not copyrightable at all. And at other times, it seems to say that Garcia just didn't do enough to gain a copyright in the scene. Either way, the majority is wrong and makes a total mess of copyright law, right here in the Hollywood Circuit. In its