1. Catalyzing Fans
Two of our own contributors--Michael McCann and Howard Wasserman--collaborated with Dan Markel to write a law review article titled "Catalyzing Fans." You may download this paper here. According to the authors:
"This paper proposes the development of Fan Action Committees (“FACs”), which, like their political counterpart (PACs), could mobilize and empower fans to play a larger role in the decision-making associated with which “production teams” the talent will work. We outline two institutional options: FACs could directly compensate talent by crowdfunding, or they could make donations to charities favored by talent. We then discuss both obstacles and objections from a variety of policy and legal perspectives ranging from competitive balance to distributive justice. Finally, we consider possible extensions of the FAC model as well as offer some ruminations on why FACs haven’t already developed.
Importantly, FACs create the potential for more efficient valuations of talent by registering not only the number of fans but also the intensity of their preferences. This insight, which stresses the upside of price discrimination, has relevance for a wide range of human endeavor where bilateral contracts have third party externalities that are not currently calibrated or adequately valued."
[Editor's Note: This piece is currently being reviewed by law reviews and journals. If you are interested in publishing this article, please contact Professor Markel immediately and directly]
2. Fans Paying College Athletes
Last year, I authored an article for The Huffington Post titled "Time to Embrace Change in College Athletics." I wrote, in part, that:
"At some point in the not too distant future, the structure of college athletics as we know it will change. There are a multitude of possibilities of what this future world may look like -- and it may be far stranger than either George Orwell or Aldous Huxley could predict. Open markets and competitive bidding wars for high school players, salary caps for conferences, revenue sharing, agent representation and sponsorship deals for college athletes, and maybe even a student athlete union all within the realm of possibility."Introducing FanPay, the brainchild of Tony Klausing. Tony writes: "The idea is that fans would contribute to a pot of money to pay student athletes. This money is escrowed, then when the student graduates, he has the right to claim the funds--or else are refunded to the contributor in full." To see a beta of this website, check it out here. If you'd like to contact Tony directly with thoughts or comments, you can email him at: tony@prizl.org.
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