Our litiguous society - Lawsuit filed by "Fear Factor" viewer

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#1
Money Hungry Moron!!

LOS ANGELES - Watching contestants eat dead rats on NBC’s gross-out stunt show “Fear Factor” so disgusted a Cleveland man that he has sued NBC for $2.5 million, saying he could not stomach what he saw.

In a handwritten four-page lawsuit filed in federal court in Cleveland on Tuesday, paralegal Austin Aitken said, “To have the individuals on the show eat (yes) and drink dead rats was crazy and from a viewer’s point of view made me throw-up as well an another in the house at the same time.”

His suit added, “NBC is sending the wrong message to its TV watchers that cash can make or have people do just about anything beyond reasoning (sic) and in most cases against their will.”

He said the show caused his blood pressure to rise so high that he became dizzy and light-headed, and when he ran away to his room, he bumped his head into the doorway.

In a brief telephone interview with Reuters, Aitken said, ”I am not at liberty to discuss the complaint unless it is a paid-interview situation.” [bash]

A spokesman for “Fear Factor” said the show would have no comment until it sees a copy of the complaint. The spokesman said the program did feature an rat-eating scene in New York’s Times Square on Nov. 8.

Over the years, contestants on the program have eaten some weird things, including ground-up spiders and live worms.
 
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#2
These types of things really get me upset. You basically know what kind of things Fear Factor is going to show, so if you can't handle it, don't watch it. So many people these days seem to think that we should be wrapped in bubble wrap and protected at all times and that no one should EVER say anything that might offend someone else.

News Flash!!! - no matter what you do, it will offend someone - period. But it seems some people just look at ways they can be offended - and occasionally try to catch a quick buck because of it.
 

bmwrocks

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#3
Well, I think it all boils down to the misguided, misled (Michael Powell) FCC and its ambiguous rules that allpy to some and not others.

Why is it OK for Fear Factor to show dead rats being blended and drank, offending many, yet Howard Stern saying "certain words" on his show which is offensive to some also is not OK? After all, if you don't like it shut it off (in both cases).

Agreed that the line has to be drawn, but lets do it fairly. What committee should decide all this anyway? Maybe a jury with a right-wing extremist, a left wing-extremist, a gay couple, a hetero couple, a porn star, a priest....GET MY POINT?

Whew, thanks for letting me vent.
 

aNoodle

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#4
Well said bmwrocks. It's a total ideological house of cards. They need to either return the air waves to 1952 or step aside and quit being such sticks in the mud. And to use a trial lawyer!?!

Rats are a major source of protein in developing countries? Yum, tastes just like chicken!
 
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#5
You nailed it BMWRocks.
You are SO right that all of the FCC rulings are unfairly arbitrary and consistently inconsistent.

The most recent issue is that Slash (I think) said the F word on Leno live, no electronic delay. The FCC has said that it was an acceptable "accident". Yet if Stern, with electronic delay, IMPLIES something with certain words and never uses the F word, they are ready to drop a $1 million fine. That's insane. It's got to be consistent.
 
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#6
Don't forget how when Oprah uses the term "oral sex" nothing happens, but when Howard Stern uses it, he also gets fined a million bucks. I don't really like Howard Stern much....his shows are pointless, repetitive, and usually demeaning towards women, but the dirtbag should still be allowed to use the same terms as other TV/radio shows publicly without getting fined for it.

And yeah, I feel sooooo bad for this guy who had to watch the conestants eat the rats....maybe he should think about it's like to be the one EATING the ground up rats.
 
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#7
Such a waste of court resources. he should be ground up and fed to the next Fear Factor contestants. He didn't even have the courtesy to type his stupid complaint. That's fine for a true pro per plaintiff, but this dude is a paralegal. he knows court rules. He could have at least gone to the public library and used a typewriter there if he didn't have a computer to use (which I highly doubt).
 
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#8
Kirby said:
Money Hungry Moron!!

His suit added, “NBC is sending the wrong message to its TV watchers that cash can make or have people do just about anything beyond reasoning (sic) and in most cases against their will.”
cash can make people do anything...like file a stupid law suit
"fear factor disabled my remote so i couldnt change, busted the buttons on the tv, permanently plugged in my tv and lets not forget, put a gun to my head threatening to shoot if i didnt watch the show"

lol...ever since that mcdoanld's coffe law suit...man, what happened to earning a living
 

aNoodle

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#9
He's a pro se plaintiff? He couldn't even get a trial attorney to represent him? That says a lot...if he can't even type his own complaint, it would be dismissed no doubt on those grounds alone. I don't know how this suit could even be accepted by the clerks office without following court rules....they even reject cases where the type face is too small or the margins are too wide or the line spacing is not double. This makes no sense at all....except the story gets everyone all hot and bothered.

With 'Tort Reform' high on Congress' list, expect the Washington lobbyists to push a rash of these stories in the coming months. These ridiculous suits give people the impression these cases are somehow close to even 1/1,000 % of all cases. Sounds like a bunch of drummed up nonsense to get people to believe our court system is out of control. Go down to your local courthouse and spend a day. You'd see none of this.

And with the famous McDonald's coffee case, the women never got that ridiculous award on appeal. But people will believe she got millions, whether it's true or not....which it's NOT.
 
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#10
Oh, courts will accept non-typed letters from pro-se people. Like prisoners, poor people, etc. However, when you're a paralegal and in the legal profession... courts will just rip on you. How, depends on the area and custom. Read this legal opinion from Texas. The briefs and stuff were written on crayon apparently. Try findlaw.com if you don't have Lexis or Westlaw. I'll see if I can dig the text up.

147 F.Supp.2d 668
 
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#11
Here we go:

147 F.Supp.2d 668, 2001 A.M.C. 2358
United States District Court,
S.D. Texas,
Galveston Division.
John W. BRADSHAW, Plaintiff,
v.
UNITY MARINE CORPORATION, INC.; Coronado, in rem; and Phillips Petroleum
Company, Defendants.
No. CIV. A. G-00-558.
June 27, 2001.
Seaman brought action against dock owner for personal injuries sustained while working aboard vessel using the dock. Upon dock owner's motion for summary judgment, the District Court, Kent, J., held that since maritime law did not impose a duty on the dock owner to provide a means of safe ingress or egress to crew member of a vessel using the dock, Texas' two-year statute of limitations for personal injury cases, rather than three-year federal statute for maritime personal injuries, applied to crew member's action against dock owner for failure to provide a means of safe ingress or egress to crew member of a vessel using the dock.
Motion granted.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

KENT, District Judge.
Plaintiff brings this action for personal injuries sustained while working aboard the M/V CORONADO. Now before the Court is Defendant Phillips Petroleum Company's ("Phillips") Motion for Summary Judgment. For the reasons set forth below, Defendant's Motion is GRANTED.

I. DISCUSSION
Plaintiff John W. Bradshaw claims that he was working as a Jones Act seaman aboard the M/V CORONADO on January 4, 1999. The CORONADO was not at sea on January 4, 1999, but instead sat docked at a Phillips' facility in Freeport, Texas. Plaintiff alleges that he "sustained injuries to his body in the course and scope of his employment." The injuries are said to have "occurred as a proximate result of the unsafe and unseaworthy condition of the tugboat CORONADO and its appurtenances while docked at the Phillips/Freeport Dock." Plaintiff's First Amended Complaint, which added Phillips as a Defendant, provides no further information about the manner in which he suffered injury. However, by way of his Response to Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff now avers that "he was forced to climb on a piling or dolphin to leave the vessel at the time he was injured." This, in combination with Plaintiff's Complaint, represents the totality of the information available to the Court respecting the potential liability of Defendant Phillips. [FN1]

FN1. Six days after filing his one-page Response, Plaintiff filed a Supplemental Opposition to Phillips Petroleum Company's Motion for Summary Judgment. Although considerably lengthier, the Supplement provides no further illumination of the factual basis for Plaintiff's claims versus Phillips.

Defendant now contends, in its Motion for Summary Judgment, that the Texas two-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims bars this action. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 16.003 (Vernon Supp.2001). Plaintiff suffered injury on January 4, 1999 and filed suit in this Court on September 15, 2000. However, Plaintiff did not amend his Complaint to add Defendant Phillips until March 28, 2001, indisputably more than two-years after the date of his alleged injury. Plaintiff now responds that he timely sued Phillips, contending that the three-year federal statute *670 for maritime personal injuries applies to his action. See 46 U.S.C. § 763a.

Before proceeding further, the Court notes that this case involves two extremely likable lawyers, who have together delivered some of the most amateurish pleadings ever to cross the hallowed causeway into Galveston, an effort which leads the Court to surmise but one plausible explanation. Both attorneys have obviously entered into a secret pact--complete with hats,
handshakes and cryptic words--to draft their pleadings entirely in crayon on the back sides of gravy-stained paper place mats, in the hope that the Court would be so charmed by their child-like efforts that their utter dearth of legal authorities in their briefing would go unnoticed. Whatever actually occurred, the Court is now faced with the daunting task of deciphering their submissions. With Big Chief tablet readied, thick black pencil in hand, and a devil-may-care laugh in the face of death, life on the razor's edge sense of exhilaration, the Court begins. Summary judgment is appropriate if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 2552-53, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986). When a motion for summary judgment is made, the nonmoving party must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 250, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2510, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). Therefore, when a defendant moves for summary judgment
based upon an affirmative defense to the plaintiff's claim, the plaintiff must bear the burden of producing some evidence to create a fact issue some element of defendant's asserted affirmative defense. See Kansa Reinsurance Co., Ltd. v. Congressional Mortgage Corp. of Texas, 20 F.3d 1362, 1371 (5th Cir.1994); F.D.I.C. v. Shrader & York, 991 F.2d 216, 220 (5th Cir.1993).

Defendant begins the descent into Alice's Wonderland by submitting a Motion that relies upon only one legal authority. The Motion cites a Fifth Circuit case which stands for the whopping proposition that a federal court sitting in Texas applies the Texas statutes of limitations to certain state and federal law claims. See Gonzales v. Wyatt, 157 F.3d 1016, 1021 n. 1 (5th Cir.1998).

That is all well and good--the Court is quite fond of the Erie doctrine; indeed there is talk of little else around both the Canal and this Court's water cooler. Defendant, however, does not even cite to Erie, but to a mere successor case, and further fails to even begin to analyze why the Court should approach the shores of Erie. Finally, Defendant does not even provide a cite to its desired Texas limitation statute. [FN2] A more bumbling approach is difficult to conceive--but wait folks, There's More!

FN2. Defendant submitted a Reply brief, on June 11, 2001, after the Court had already drafted, but not finalized, this Order. In a regretful effort to be thorough, the Court reviewed this submission. It too fails to cite to either the Texas statute of limitations or any Fifth Circuit cases discussing maritime law liability for Plaintiff's claims versus Phillips.



Plaintiff responds to this deft, yet minimalist analytical wizardry with an equally gossamer wisp of an argument, although Plaintiff does at least cite the federal limitations provision applicable to maritime tort claims. See 46 U.S.C. § 763a. Naturally, Plaintiff also neglects to provide any analysis whatsoever of why his claim versus Defendant Phillips is a maritime action. Instead, Plaintiff "cites" to a single case from the Fourth Circuit. Plaintiff's citation, however, points to a
nonexistent Volume "1886" of the Federal Reporter *671 Third Edition and neglects to provide a pinpoint citation for what, after being located, turned out to be a forty-page decision. Ultimately, to the Court's dismay after reviewing the opinion, it stands simply for the bombshell proposition that torts committed on navigable waters (in this case an alleged defamation committed by the controversial G. Gordon Liddy aboard a cruise ship at sea) require the application of general maritime rather than state tort law. See Wells v. Liddy, 186 F.3d 505, 524 (4th Cir.1999) (What the ...)?! The Court cannot even begin to comprehend why this case was selected for reference. It is almost as if Plaintiff's counsel chose the opinion by throwing long range darts at the Federal Reporter (remarkably enough hitting a nonexistent volume!). And though the Court often gives
great heed to dicta from courts as far flung as those of Manitoba, it finds this case unpersuasive.

There is nothing in Plaintiff's cited case about ingress or egress between a vessel and a dock, although counsel must have been thinking that Mr. Liddy must have had both ingress and egress from the cruise ship at some docking facility, before uttering his fateful words.

Further, as noted above, Plaintiff has submitted a Supplemental Opposition to Defendant's Motion. This Supplement is longer than Plaintiff's purported Response, cites more cases, several constituting binding authority from either the Fifth Circuit or the Supreme Court, and actually includes attachments which purport to be evidence. However, this is all that can be said positively for Plaintiff's Supplement, which does nothing to explain why, on the facts of this case, Plaintiff has an admiralty claim against Phillips (which probably makes some sense because
Plaintiff doesn't). Plaintiff seems to rely on the fact that he has pled Rule 9(h) and stated an admiralty claim versus the vessel and his employer to demonstrate that maritime law applies to Phillips. This bootstrapping argument does not work; Plaintiff must properly invoke admiralty law versus each Defendant discretely. See Debellefeuille v. Vastar Offshore, Inc., 139 F.Supp.2d 821, 824 (S.D.Tex.2001) (discussing this issue and citing authorities). Despite the continued shortcomings of Plaintiff's supplemental submission, the Court commends Plaintiff for his vastly
improved choice of crayon--Brick Red is much easier on the eyes than Goldenrod, and stands out much better amidst the mustard splotched about Plaintiff's briefing. But at the end of the day, even if you put a calico dress on it and call it Florence, a pig is still a pig.

[1] Link to KeyCite Notes[2] Link to KeyCite Notes Now, alas, the Court must return to grownup land. As vaguely alluded to by the parties, the issue in this case turns upon which law--state or maritime--applies to each of Plaintiff's potential claims versus Defendant Phillips.

And despite Plaintiff's and Defendant's joint, heroic efforts to obscure it, the answer to this question is readily ascertained. The Fifth Circuit has held that "absent a maritime status between the parties, a dock owner's duty to crew members of a vessel using the dock is defined by the application of state law, not maritime law." Florida Fuels, Inc. v. Citgo Petroleum Corp., 6 F.3d 330, 332 (5th Cir.1993) (holding that Louisiana premises liability law governed a crew member's
claim versus a dock which was not owned by his employer); accord Forrester v. Ocean Marine Indem. Co., 11 F.3d 1213, 1218 (5th Cir.1993). Specifically, maritime law does not impose a duty on the dock owner to provide a means of safe ingress or egress. See Forrester, 11 F.3d at 1218. Therefore, because maritime law does not create a duty on the part of Defendant Phillips vis-a-vis Plaintiff, any claim Plaintiff does have versus Phillips *672 must necessarily arise under state law. [FN3] See id.; Florida Fuels, 6 F.3d at 332-34.

FN3. Take heed and be suitably awed, oh boys and girls--the Court was able to state the issue and its resolution in one paragraph ... despite dozens of pages of gibberish from the parties to the contrary!

[3] Link to KeyCite Notes The Court, therefore, under Erie, applies the Texas statute of limitations. Texas has adopted a two-year statute of limitations for personal injury cases. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 16.003. Plaintiff failed to file his action versus Defendant Phillips within that two-year time frame. Plaintiff has offered no justification, such as the discovery rule or other similar tolling doctrines, for this failure. Accordingly, Plaintiff's claims versus Defendant Phillips were not timely filed and are barred. Defendant Phillips' Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and Plaintiff's state law claims against Defendant Phillips are hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. A Final Judgment reflecting such will be entered in due course.

II. CONCLUSION

After this remarkably long walk on a short legal pier, having received no useful guidance whatever from either party, the Court has endeavored, primarily based upon its affection for both counsel, but also out of its own sense of morbid curiosity, to resolve what it perceived to be the legal issue presented. Despite the waste of perfectly good crayon seen in both parties' briefing (and the inexplicable odor of wet dog emanating from such) the Court believes it has satisfactorily resolved this matter. Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.

At this juncture, Plaintiff retains, albeit seemingly to his befuddlement and/or consternation, a maritime law cause of action versus his alleged Jones Act employer, Defendant Unity Marine Corporation, Inc. However, it is well known around these parts that Unity Marine's lawyer is equally likable and has been writing crisply in ink since the second grade. Some old-timers even spin yarns of an ability to type. The Court cannot speak to the veracity of such loose talk, but out
of caution, the Court suggests that Plaintiff's lovable counsel had best upgrade to a nice shiny No. 2 pencil or at least sharpen what's left of the stubs of his crayons for what remains of this heart-stopping, spine-tingling action. [FN4]

FN4. In either case, the Court cautions Plaintiff's counsel not to run with a sharpened writing utensil in hand--he could put his eye out.



IT IS SO ORDERED.
S.D.Tex.,2001.
Bradshaw v. Unity Marine Corp., Inc.
147 F.Supp.2d 668, 2001 A.M.C. 2358
END OF DOCUMENT
 

aNoodle

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#12
codex57 said:
Here we go:
...
Defendant begins the descent into Alice's Wonderland by submitting a Motion that relies upon only one legal authority. The Motion cites a Fifth Circuit case which stands for the whopping proposition that a federal court sitting in Texas applies the Texas statutes of limitations to certain state and federal law claims. See Gonzales v. Wyatt, 157 F.3d 1016, 1021 n. 1 (5th Cir.1998).

That is all well and good--the Court is quite fond of the Erie doctrine; indeed there is talk of little else around both the Canal and this Court's water cooler. Defendant, however, does not even cite to Erie, but to a mere successor case, and further fails to even begin to analyze why the Court should approach the shores of Erie. Finally, Defendant does not even provide a cite to its desired Texas limitation statute. [FN2] A more bumbling approach is difficult to conceive--but wait folks, There's More!
...
Did the judge write his opinion in crayon too (cuz it sounds like it).

That's a funny one codex....let's see, a first semester law student could probably cite Erie.
 


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