Over the last half James-Kachmar-08_webcentury there has been an explosion in the popularity of yoga in the United States, much of it attributable to Bikram Choudhury, the self-proclaimed “Yogi to the Stars.” In 1979, he published a book titled Bikram’s Beginning Yoga Class, which centered on a sequence of 26 yoga poses and two breathing exercises. Two former students of his started a new type of yoga (hot yoga) which resulted in Choudhury suing them for copyright infringement. On October 8, 2015, the Ninth Circuit issued its opinion affirming the trial court’s summary adjudication as to the copyright claim and finding that the Bikram yoga “sequence” was not subject to Copyright protection.

In 1971, Choudhury came to the U.S. and settled in Beverly Hills, California. With his arrival, he helped popularize yoga in the United States and developed a “sequence” of 26 asanas and two breathing exercises; Choudhury opened a yoga studio where he taught the “Sequence” and eventually published his book, Bikram’s Beginning Yoga Class. In 1979, he registered the book with the U.S. Copyright Office. (In 2002, he registered a compilation of exercises contained in the book using a supplementary registration form that referenced the 1979 book.)Continue Reading Yoga and the Copyright Idea/Expression Dichotomy