The Junior Seau Wrongful Death Lawsuit Cites NFL Films for Mythologizing and Spreading the Fraudulent Messages of the NFL
Junior Seau’s family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the NFL and various other defendants earlier this week in California, not surprising considering the recent announcement that he had CTE. A copy of the actual filing was released on Friday, and put online by the Oceanside-Camp Pendleton Patch. (PDF here) Much of the petition is similar to the myriad of petitions filed by former players, and which I summarized last year. Seau played much of his career after the creation of the MBTI committee, which is notoriously involved in this litigation for its role in minimizing the effective of traumatic brain injuries.
One thing the petition does do, which I have not noticed in others I reviewed, is go after NFL Films for its role in romanticizing big hits and playing with injuries, including concussions. NFL Films is not a named defendant, cited as an agent of the NFL in the petition. Starting at page 9 of the petition, you get the following allegations:
“Part of the NFL Defendants’ strategy to promote NFL football is to glorify the brutality and ferocity of NFL football, in part lauding and mythologizing the most brutal and ferocious players and collisions, and simultaneously propagating the fraudulent representation that “getting your bell rung,” “being dinged,” and putting big hits on others is a badge of courage which does not seriously threaten one’s health.”
The NFL has “propagated the false myth that collisions of all kinds, including brutal and ferocious collisions, many of which lead to short-term and long-term neurological damage to players, are an acceptable, desired, and natural consequence of the game . . . ”
“NFL Films is an agent and instrumentality of the NFL Defendants devoted to producing promotional films for the NFL. . . . These featured videos are marketed and sold to advance the NFL’s culture of violence as entertainment.”
. . .
The films utilize players, including Junior Seau, to spread the fraudulent message that brutal violence is necessary for the sport.”
The petition even cites a specific NFL Films production, “NFL Rocks” from 1993, when a young Junior Seau offered his opinion on punishing hits in the film: “If I feel some dizziness, I know that guy is feeling double.” The same film also quotes Michael Irvin saying he would trade a concussion for a reception, according to the petition.
[photo via USA Today Sports Images]

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7 Responses to “The Junior Seau Wrongful Death Lawsuit Cites NFL Films for Mythologizing and Spreading the Fraudulent Messages of the NFL”
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January 26th, 2013 at 11:04 AM
felling double.
Spell check.
Lisk – What were you doing at the KSU/KU game?
January 26th, 2013 at 11:17 AM
Lisk – What were you doing at the KSU/KU game?
I wasn’t at a KSU/KU Game. I went to Missouri-South Carolina on Tuesday night.
January 26th, 2013 at 11:22 AM
I hope the NFL countersues his family for not showing sufficient compassion and concern – after all, if they really care about him, they would have found some way to have prevented this from happening.
January 26th, 2013 at 11:30 AM
I loved watching “NFL Crunch Course” when I was a kid. I think it came with an SI subscription. The Walter Paytom part in particular was great. Holy crap did that movie sensationalize the punishment of playing in the NFL. I remember one guy analogizing kickoff teams to soldiers going to war.
Anyway – I have no opinion on these matters really. I think the players are willing participants in the violence. The fact that it has long-term effects should not be surprising and those risks, while not specifically known, were pretty obvious. However, it doesn’t make any cases of those long-term effects less sad.
January 26th, 2013 at 11:31 AM
*Payton
January 26th, 2013 at 11:33 AM
I wasn’t at a KSU/KU Game. I went to Missouri-South Carolina on Tuesday night. Lisk
Now that makes sense. McIntyre told me to look out for you at the KU/KSU game in Manhattan. It was puzzling.
January 26th, 2013 at 1:04 PM
Razor i had cc too. Love the deacon jones quote about leaving the game with nothing but a bleeding heart and parcells quote If they dont bite when they’re puppies they’re probably not gonna bite