Vanderbilt flipped Five-Star Plus+ quarterback Jared Curtis from Georgia in December, and the recruiting package included a movie role coordinated by comedian Nate Bargatze. Curtis, rated the No. 2 quarterback in the 2026 class, had been committed to Georgia since June before switching to Vanderbilt's 2026 class. The film component was structured through Vanderbilt's NIL collective, not paid directly by the athletic department.
Bargatze, a Nashville native and Vanderbilt graduate, has spent the past eighteen months building relationships with the football program's NIL apparatus. The movie role is tied to an unnamed production Bargatze is developing through his production company, which has a first-look deal with a major streamer. Curtis will appear in a supporting role with compensation structured as a standard SAG-AFTRA contract plus backend participation. The shooting schedule runs six weeks in summer 2025, timed to avoid fall camp conflicts. Vanderbilt's NIL collective, Anchor Impact, confirmed the arrangement but declined to specify the film's budget or Curtis's total compensation.
The move matters because it separates Nashville's NIL pitch from the standard cash-and-car model still dominant in SEC recruiting. Georgia offered Curtis a higher base NIL package—sources place it near $2.1 million over four years—but Vanderbilt's film deal carries residual income potential and an entertainment-industry credential that plays in Curtis's stated interest in broadcasting. Bargatze's involvement also signals a template other programs will copy: pairing donor-backed NIL money with celebrity access that creates post-football optionality. Curtis's father played minor-league baseball and runs a sports-marketing consultancy; the family has been explicit about wanting diversified income streams, not just upfront cash.
Vanderbilt went 2-10 in 2024 and fired head coach Clark Lea in November. Interim coach Matt Luke is not expected to retain the job, but the athletic department kept NIL commitments intact through the coaching search to avoid losing Curtis and three other top-50 recruits who signed in December. The Bargatze deal was negotiated before Lea's dismissal and survived the transition. Anchor Impact's annual budget is approximately $8 million, smaller than Georgia's $20 million NIL war chest, but the collective has positioned itself as the entertainment-industry access point for athletes who want media careers. Curtis is the third Vanderbilt football signee in two cycles to receive a film or television production credit as part of his NIL package.
The next coaching hire will determine whether Curtis stays committed through National Signing Day in February 2026. Vanderbilt is expected to name a head coach by mid-January, with Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein and Liberty's Jamey Chadwell both interviewed. Curtis has maintained he is enrolled at Vanderbilt regardless of coaching changes, but his father told reporters the family will reassess if the hire is "a retread." Georgia has kept a spot open in its 2026 class and has contacted Curtis's camp twice since the flip. Bargatze has not commented publicly but was photographed with Curtis at a Vanderbilt basketball game in December, wearing a custom "Anchor Down" jacket that trended on Nashville social media.
The Anchor Impact collective is now fielding inquiries from other athletes about similar arrangements. Two basketball recruits and one baseball signee have asked about production roles in Bargatze projects, according to a person familiar with the conversations. The collective is also in discussions with a second Nashville-based celebrity—identity not disclosed—to create a NIL vertical focused on country-music artist collaborations. That package would target offensive-line recruits, a position group Vanderbilt has struggled to staff competitively.
Curtis is scheduled to enroll at Vanderbilt in January 2026. His film shoots three months later.