Main Menu

Welcome back to the Spotlight! With our entering the 12th frame of 2025, so begins a cavalcade of holiday parties, overindulgences, Spotify Wrapped statistics, Mariah Carey, timeless film classics, travel and year in review retrospectives. Despite recent momentum and tens of millions of dollars poured into lobbying efforts by NCAA commissioners, it does not look like 2025 will be the year that is remembered for Congress’ passing legislation to comprehensively regulate college sports, as lawmakers failed to advance the SCORE Act because (get this:…) Congress could not reach consensus. Go figure! I mean, Congress usually sings “Kumbaya,” respects one another and agrees on everything, right? So, we will have to wait (at least) until 2026 for an overarching federal framework for name, image and likeness rights, medical and mental health benefits for athletes, regulation of agents and NIL contracts.

But, not to worry, my fellow sports and entertainment business junkies, a late entrant to the year in review will be Netflix’s monumental acquisition of Warner Bros. in a deal valued at $82.7 billion, which is, according to my calculations, a lot of money. The deal will bring valuable intellectual property to Netflix for the development of new projects, while providing a direct pipeline of content to the Netflix platform. What it will ultimately mean for theatrical distribution of films—already challenged by the dominant streaming industry is unclear, but it wouldn’t be a bad idea to start fine tuning your popcorn recipe in case things go sideways.

    • Nationwide Insurance renews its close ties to the NFL with an extension of its sponsorship deal that keeps them as a presenting sponsor of the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award. With their also having an endorsement deal with NFL Hall of Famer Peyton Manning, it’s clear they’re willing to pay-tons for the exposure.
    • Veteran actor Tom Selleck decides to switch agencies from CAA to UTA. His mustache is still mulling over its options.
    • The US Supreme Court heard arguments from the record industry and internet service provider Cox Communications in connection with a billion dollar lawsuit alleging that Cox is liable for copyright infringement by failing to boot serial copyright infringers off its services. In other words, Cox is facing the music because it didn’t make others face the music for taking the music.
    • Two members of Australian children’s music group, “The Wiggles” found themselves in hot water for appearing in a music video alluding to drug use for musician Keli Holiday’s new song, “Ecstasy.” The video was eventually withdrawn, which seems appropriate since a symptom of withdrawal is the wiggles.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! With a little under a week until Thanksgiving, it has once again become fair “game” for small talk to be dominated by mostly unsolicited advice as to how one should prepare their turkey. Personally, I like to use a dry brine, rub a compound butter under the skin and load up the bird with aromatics, I digress. The truth is, there are many ways to cook the versatile poultry. The Spotlight is much the same way: stuffed with a tantalizing array of complementary flavors.

For instance, a deep fried turkey, like an Installment of the Spotlight can be a juicy crowd pleaser—each likely to bring (or burn) down the house in their own right. Other times, a roasted turkey can be tough and dry—adjectives that I would prefer to think of as describing the Spotlight’s commentary and sense of humor rather than its readability. The ingredients (sports/shallots, film/fennel, music/mushrooms, television/thyme, etc.) can vary depending on what’s available and interesting in the “kitchen.” Invariably, both turkey and the Spotlight pair nicely with a glass of wine, and yes, they may even make you drowsy. Still, even when the turkey or my writing is uninspired and bland, there’s usually some noteworthy sides to fill you up. So with that, however your turkey comes out, may your mac and cheese be as cheesy, and your cornbread as corny, as yours truly. For now, feel free to dig in on the below and fill your plate with enough to last you to when the Spotlight returns In December.

    • Injured New York Giants rookie sensation running back Cam Skattebo faced criticism after making a fun appearance on “WWE Monday Night Raw” at Madison Square Garden in which he had a scripted scuffle with wrestlers. In fairness to Skattebo, he was shut out of the New York Philharmonic.
    • Recording artist Usher sues a group of investors to recover an unpaid $700,000 on an original $1.7 million that he lent for the purchase and development of Atlanta restaurant and lounge space. Asked about whether he is optimistic about his chances of prevailing, Usher replied “Yeah!”
    • On the heels (and soles) of last week’s announcement that Steph Curry and Under Armour were parting ways, Curry has been “courting” other brands by wearing their sneakers in his past few games. First Nike, then Reebok. Undoubtedly, he has other plans afoot.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! Is it just me or are sports scandals becoming more and more prevalent? Perhaps it’s that there’s so much money changing hands, including in legalized gambling, there is more opportunity and temptation to game the system. Perhaps it’s that digital fingerprints make it easier for bad actors to get caught. Perhaps morals are loosening. Or perhaps people are just flouting Mary J. Blige’s (shoutout to the 914) pleas for “No More Drama.” Whatever the explanation (I’m pretty sure it is the last one), new indictments and punishments came down this week stemming from game manipulation for betting purposes—just weeks after similar allegations taking place in the NBA. The NCAA announced that a handful of former student-athletes were involved in schemes in which they intentionally did not score or “threw” their game.

Not to be outdone, in the MLB, Cleveland Guardians’ pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz allegedly purposely threw balls so that gamblers could bet on pitches being balls or strikes. Clase and Ortiz are both excellent relief pitchers—the former being one of the top closers in all Major League Baseball—but the ultimate relief would be that each of these allegations prove to be false. However, all indications seem to be that the allegations are credible. Unfortunately, these incidents do not happen in a vacuum and inject a level of cynicism and skepticism whenever an umpire or referee makes a questionable call, a player sits out with an injury or makes a bone-headed play. Hopefully, all of these events will in the long run serve as examples of what not to do, but at least in the near term these instances all are unsettling affronts to the integrity of the games to which these scandals relate.

    • Twelve years after Under Armour beat out a notoriously ill-prepared Nike pitch to sign then NBA superstar Steph Curry to an endorsement deal, Curry and Under Armour are parting ways, with Curry taking all of his IP out on the open market. If you listen closely, you can hear an army of brand executives rehearsing the proper pronunciation of Curry’s name.
    • Financial giant Goldman Sachs buys a majority stake of sports talent agency Excel Sports Management. As part of the deal, Excel will get a direct pipeline to capital, while Goldman will get a direct pipeline of talent to appear at its executives’ children’s bar/bat mitzvahs, christenings, sweet 16s and quinceañeras.
    • Actors Michael Caine and Matthew McConaughey link up with AI audio company ElevenLabs, allowing virtual reproduction their famous voices. McConaughey’s voice is not yet available through ElevenLabs’ marketplace out of the company’s fear that users will overwhelm the system with requests for “Alright, alright, alright.”

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! This past week, amidst Halloween candy sorting (and sampling…and re-sampling…) a recording artist by the name of Xania Monet generated enough radio play to make a historic appearance on the Billboard R&B charts. Why was it historic? Not because Xania Monet is a relative of French impressionist Claude (though, kudos to you for retaining art history), but rather because Xania Monet is a relative of Claude…and Alexa…and Siri…and Grok. You see, Xania Monet is a creation of Telisha “Nikki” Jones, who uses generative software and her own lyrics to bring Monet to “life.”

On the one hand, this represents a democratization of the music industry. On the other hand, it’s an anxiety-inducing moment for recording artists of the human variety. Put differently, the ease with which new AI-generated music can be pushed out makes it more likely for consumers’ mass consumption of Xania and likelier still for traditional musicians’ mass consumption of Xanax. Whether this is a passing fad or a sign of things to come (probably the latter), one thing is for certain: the Spotlight is proudly AI-free and authentic since its very first founding. And based on what I’ve seen from my late night trials, that’s not in danger of that changing any time soon!

    • Highly decorated Men’s tennis star adds a deal to his endorsement portfolio, leading a $5 million seed round for “corn-free popcorn” brand Cob. What’s this corn-free popcorn, you ask? It is a snack product made with sorghum – which is incidentally exactly what I experience when I get a corn kernel stuck in my teeth.
    • Following on the heels of this week’s Mayoral election in New York City, President Trump published (and was forced to take down) a doctored New York Knicks logo to satirize a different doctored New York Knicks logo that Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani used (for which he received a cease and desist letter) during his campaign. While I am relieved to see the Knicks not wading into the political morass, I am confused about why there seem to be more graphic designers than IP lawyers on both sides of the aisle.
    • Just when you thought the “K-Pop Demon Hunters” craze might be winding down after Halloween, Netflix announced that a sequel will be made, triggering a $15 million cash bonus for Sony film studio. Golden indeed.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight, boos and ghouls. On this Hallow’s Eve, the only thing scarier than brain-eating zombies is not having anything for said zombies to dine on. After all, as your mummy would say, “a brain is a terrible thing to waste.” Fortunately, I am leaving out a big bowl of knowledge treats and there is no limit per customer—witch, to be frank(enstein), is great news for those of you looking for your fill of sports and entertainment business updates on the web. Make no bones about it, you can count on it like Dracula. Hopefully, these light-hearted holiday puns won’t spook you off, and before long you’ll be gob(b)lin more down for Thanksgiving. For now, open up your bags and get a handful of what I have to offer below.

    • Gymnast/model Livvy Dunne turns a viral moment in which cameras captured her stress-sweating through her boyfriend Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher (and presumptive National League Cy Young award winner) Paul Skenes’ final outing of the season, from a stain into gold, as she endorses Secret Anti-perspirant. No sweat indeed.
    • Shadow Lion, the entertainment and marketing studio of Hall of Fame quarterback Tom Brady, gets a strategic investment from Brady’s current employer, Fox Sports—the same company that pays him $37.5 million per year. Talk about being outfoxed.
    • Legendary R&B singer Patti LaBelle enters a partnership with Primary Wave involving such hits from her music catalog as “Lady Marmalade.” Presumably the offer letter included the business version of the words, “vous le vous coucher avec moi?

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! This time of year, the color orange not only evokes pumpkins and falling leaves, but also basketball. Indeed, the NBA season tipped off this past week, replete with intrigue and excitement on and off the court. Notably, the offseason media rights shuffle reunited the NBA with NBC (reviving the sweet sounds of John Tesh’s “Roundball Rock”) and brought old faces to new places with the “Inside the NBA” team of Ernie Johnson, Shaquille O’Neal, Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith debuting on ESPN after having moved over from TNT (the latter two hosts predicted a certain orange (and blue) team from New York would be playing for an NBA championship this year).

Regrettably, however, orange also evokes jumpsuits as much as it does jump shots, with the Department of Justice announcing the FBI’s arrest of current and former NBA players Chauncey Billups, Damon Jones and Terry Rozier in connection with a federal gambling probe that uncovered several alleged conspiracies involving fixed poker games and sharing of inside information with bettors. To be sure, the timing is awful for the NBA (if there ever was a time for a sports league to have its integrity called into question). But it is also rather inauspicious timing for it to be announced this very same week that collegiate athletes and schools’ athletics staff will now be permitted to gamble on professional sports. Perhaps the conduct of the pros will serve as a cautionary tale for collegiate athletes rather than a foreshadowing of things to come in this sports business environment. At the very least, it should serve as a reminder of the need for athletes’ mentors and advisors to encourage the exercise of better judgment regarding the use of money and the privileged position that allows them to earn it.

    • Having already launched a lifestyle brand, “American Riviera Orchard” (recently rebranded “As Ever”) Meghan Markle looks poised to be next to wade into the crowded waters of celebrity-branded beauty products. A word of advice to Markle’s potential business partner: go heavy on the equity – she tends to distance herself from royalties.
    • Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Bruce Springsteen, when asked about Jeremy Allen White’s portrayal of him in the biopic “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere,” said that he could not tell the difference between White’s voice and that of his own on certain recordings. AI-driven music companies, when asked about Jeremy Allen White’s portrayal of Springsteen in the biopic “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” said “stay in your lane!”
    • Ari Emanuel’s global events and experience company MARI acquired digital ticketing platform TodayTix, in what I can only assume is a gross overpayment for tickets to see “Wicked” on Broadway.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! One thing I love about this season is the memorable fall pastime of apple picking, with another installment of that chapter coming for me this weekend. Something about the experience makes paying above retail prices for the opportunity to pick your own fruit off trees just gets my juices flowing. But that’s not what I’m here to talk about. As you know, the core of the Spotlight is to plant seeds of sports and entertainment industry with a dash of humor (or at least that’s what I call it). I guess you could say my writing style stems from my desire to make the reading more a-peeling so that you may pick from a tree in my orchard of knowledge—by the bushel, and always free (or at least until I figure out how to monetize this). For those who are feeling rotten from all this wordplay, apple-y for you, I have other fruits to bear.

    • Netflix’s viral sensation film “K-Pop Demon Hunters” is rolling out sing-along screenings of the film around Halloween. It’s perhaps the scariest house of horrors for introverts around.
    • New Balance ink UCLA Basketball’s shooting guards on the men’s and women’s side to NIL endorsement deals, giving their bank accounts new balances.
    • With sights set on a “Rat Pack” themed venue in Las Vegas, Irving Azoff’s Iconic Artists Group acquires the rights to Frank Sinatra’s name, image and likeness. No word on what the venue would be named but the pizzeria there will almost assuredly be named “Amore.”

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! After an exciting Game 3 of the American League Division Series in which Aaron Judge hit a memorable, almost impossible game-tying home run to help propel the New York Yankees to a comeback victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday night, the Yankees showed a glimmer of hope that they could mount a comeback and win two more games to advance to the next round of the MLB postseason. Sure enough, aided by the Toronto Blue Jays’ unorthodox decision to swap out their baseball bats for pool noodles and to wear cinderblock cleats, the Yankees had a resounding Game 4 victory on Wednesday night to set up a decisive Game 5 tonight in Toronto.

OK, so that part didn’t actually happen in real life (the Yankees were eliminated in Game 4 after the Yankees’ bats might as well have been pool noodles), but it did appear to happen with the aid of OpenAI’s new hyper-realistic Sora 2 video generation AI model. The absurdity of my account of Game 4 undoubtedly provided a big hint that it was contrived. But, what happens when the model gets so advanced, and the absurdity gets removed?  People will have an exceedingly difficult time separating fact from fiction and the individuals depicted in these videos may find themselves losing control of their personas.  That is exactly why Hollywood’s talent agencies have voiced concern over the technology—with WME going so far as to opt-out from having their talent’s likenesses licensed for use by Sora 2. It will be interesting to see whether OpenAI puts safeguards in place to protect brands’ and individuals’ intellectual property from unauthorized exploitation by Sora 2. But for now, I think I’ll try to create a video of me at the New York Yankees’ ticker tape parade that never was.

    • LeBron James teased a “Second Decision” making light of his infamous 2010 television special surrounding his NBA free agency in which he announced he would be signing with the Miami Heat. This time around, the “Decision” turned out to be an endorsement for Hennessy Cognac. Incidentally, for New York Knicks fans like myself, the initial Decision was also taken as an endorsement of liquor.
    • Innovative Artists Entertainment signs 6’10” NBA Hall of Famer Dwight Howard for representing him in broadcasting opportunities. In a related story, Innovative Artists Entertainment signs a purchase order for larger door frames.
    • This year’s selection of Puerto Rican recording artist Bad Bunny Super Bowl Halftime Show has roiled many to the point that Conservative organization Turning Point USA will be counterprogramming the halftime show. In other words, halftime will be as much about the divide between the first and second halves of a football game as it will be about the divide between Americans.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight and Shana Tovah to those, like me, who celebrate Rosh Hashanah—the Jewish New Year. Here’s to hoping that the year ahead will be as sweet as apples and honey. The Spotlight will be off next week as I fast in observance of Yom Kippur (the Jewish day of atonement). For those who haven’t been around me when I am hungry, consider yourself lucky. For those who have, you’re welcome and I am truly sorry. While I am at it, I might as well atone for the words that I have said (or will say while stuck in Long Island traffic due to the Ryder Cup this weekend). I am SOOOO sorry for my sarcasm. And most of all, I am sorry that I am not sorry for my corny dad jokes (some of which appear below!).

    • Actor Ben Stiller (who also observes Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur) launches his own low calorie soda brand called Stiller’s. At 30 calories per serving, it is a better-for-you option that even Derek Zoolander could indulge in. It also already has a huge NFL fanbase in Pittsburgh.
    • Having portrayed the New York Yankees’ Assistant to the Traveling Secretary in his role as George Costanza (Ben Stiller’s father Jerry’s on-screen son) on Seinfeld, Jason Alexander is the face of lifestyle brand KITH’s New York Yankees collection. You might need to read this one a few times.
    • Director Christopher Nolan was elected the new president of the Directors Guild of America—which means that he’ll probably hire Cillian Murphy as a union organizer.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Welcome back to the Spotlight! If you feel a chill in the air, it might be because the seasons are changing and Fall is nearly upon us. Or perhaps, it’s the free speech and expression that Americans have held dear being chilled out of fear of reprisal or getting silenced whether it be by force or coercion. If the eggshells that I am walking upon are any indication, it seems like it is the latter. Call me old fashioned, but I miss the days of when people could hold differences of opinion, have civil discourse and engage in sifting and winnowing (shoutout to my alma mater University of Wisconsin) as opposed to resorting to violence or “cancelling” someone. In any event, I fear I have probably said too much, but yet not enough—so let’s switch gears…

    • Fresh off her album release, Sabrina Carpenter is grabbing headlines with a cup giveaway and promotional “daydream” hotline with brand partner Dunkin’, and an announced October 18 host and musical guest appearance on Saturday Night Live (assuming the show is still on air).
    • Tom Brady is coming out of retirement again – sort of. The future NFL Hall of Fame quarterback is slated to compete in a Fanatics-sponsored flag football exhibition in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Chances are that he’ll lead his team to victory--as long as Eli Manning isn’t there.
    • Pop-punk singer and songwriter Avril Lavigne is launching a wine brand of the same name as her early 2000s song that put her on the map: “Complicated.” Consumers are encouraged to remember to stay well hy-drated and not to drive while intox-icated.

For inquiries and/or unabashed compliments, please feel free to contact me at josh.bloomgarden@foster.com or add me on LinkedIn.

Search This Blog

Subscribe

RSS RSS Feed

Our Team
The Sports, Arts & Entertainment group at Foster Garvey provides full service legal representation on sports, entertainment and business matters, including handling transactions related to brand management, licensing, joint ventures, venture capital, private equity, technology, the Internet and new media.
Read More

Recent Posts

Topics

Select Category:

Archives

Select Month:

Contributors

Back to Page

We use cookies to improve your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you agree to the use of cookies. To learn more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Policy.