Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Friday, April 19, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

NFL Faces Another Class Action,|From Retirees of the ‘Glory Days’

MINNEAPOLIS (CN) - The NFL faces another class action from retired players, this one led by wide receiver Fred Barnett, who claims the league profits by exploiting retirees' identities. Barnett says that while standard NFL contracts allow the league exploit the identities of active players, these rights expire with the contract when players retire.

Barnett, who played for the Philadelphia Eagles in the early '90s and retired with the Miami Dolphins, says the NFL is milking its "the glory days" by using his identity "as a marketing and advertising technique to convey authenticity, enhance the NFL's brand awareness and increase its revenue."

Barnett says he seeks only his "fair share" of this revenue. His federal complaint says the value of retired players' images is self-evident, as the NFL has taken extreme measures to restrict access to NFL films.

"For instance, the NFL restricts media, including local news outlets, to showing only 45 seconds per day of footage of NFL players shot at league or team facilities in any fashion. This includes non-playing situations such as news conferences, interviews and practice-field reports," according to the complaint.

It adds: "If a media outlet, such as a local news station, wishes to use footage of retired players as part of reporting the news, it must pay the NFL steep fees."

And the NFL has created an entire "filmmaking wing" to profit from game films.

The complaint adds: "The NFL also creates an entire line of NFL Films productions for each team, for each year. Regardless of the team's performance, the productions paint the season in the most positive, promotional light possible. NFL Films produced and distributed 'Video Yearbook' productions for the Philadelphia Eagles throughout the 1990's. Plaintiff Barnett was the team's starting wide receiver from 1990-95 and as such appears regularly in these promotional films."

The NFL describes NFL Films as "the backbone of the NFL Network" and its "year-round channel" draws "heavily" on NFL Films' resources, which include "more than 100 million feet of film in its library," Barnett says.

The retired players who created the glory days deserve their fair share, Barnett says, particularly in light of the fact that "now-retired NFL players, as a group, suffer severe physical maladies and disabilities as a result of the sacrifices they made to the NFL what it is today."

He seeks class certification and damages for unjust enrichment, violations of statutory and common-law rights of publicity, misappropriation, false endorsement and Lanham Act violations.

He is represented by Gordon Rudd Jr. with Zimmerman Reed.

Categories / Uncategorized

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...