Owners of the $4,000 Peloton exercise bikes are griping online that the company’s prior use of unlicensed music — and subsequent $150 million lawsuit that aims to get the company to stop its practice — has now subjected them to an uninspiring selection to accompany the workouts that cost upwards of $468 a year.
The National Music Publishers Association filed its lawsuit against New York-based Peloton Interactive Inc. in federal court in March, accusing the exercise bike maker of incorporating into its exercise programs heart-pumping songs by such artists as Rihanna, Bruno Mars, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Justin Timberlake, Shawn Mendes, Ed Sheeran, Wiz Khalifa, Thomas Rhett, Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber, Florida Georgia Line, Drake, Gwen Stefani and more, as reported Thursday on Engadget.com.
And now, customers have taken their complaints online, posting on such sites as Reddit.com: "Random songs are plopped in the middle of an otherwise consistently themed playlist."
"I'm enjoying rides much less than before.” "I bought this bike because I like to ride to good music and now I'm forced to ride to terrible tunes."
Perhaps it’s the oh-so-sweet honey in that popular green can of AriZona Iced Tea's green tea with ginseng and honey that’s giving drinkers that boost of energy and vitality the medicinal plant root ginseng promises.