Vanderbilt landed five-star quarterback Jared Curtis from Georgia in February with an NIL package that includes a speaking role in comedian Nate Bargatze's upcoming feature film. The deal, structured through Vanderbilt United and Bargatze's production company, represents a material departure from pure cash collectives. Curtis arrives as the highest-ranked recruit in program history—247Sports rates him the No. 2 overall prospect in the 2026 class—and the first elite quarterback Nashville has secured since Jay Cutler committed in 2002.
Bargatze, a Vanderbilt alumnus with 18 million ticket sales across his last touring cycle, personally reached Curtis during the final week of recruitment. The film role was positioned as deferred value: Curtis receives an IMDb credit, SAG-AFTRA eligibility, and a negotiated back-end payment tied to streaming performance. Vanderbilt United's annual stipend sits near $750,000 for starting quarterbacks, per conversations with two NIL fund advisors. The film component adds what sources describe as low-to-mid six figures in option value, contingent on the movie closing financing and reaching production by Q1 2026. Bargatze's team declined to name the project or distributor.
The structure matters because it solves two problems elite programs face when competing against SEC cash. First, it gives Vanderbilt a differentiated asset—Hollywood access—that Georgia's traditional collective cannot replicate. Second, it converts entertainment upside into recruiting currency without violating NCAA pay-for-play prohibitions. Curtis is not paid to attend Vanderbilt; he is paid for acting work that happens to begin after he enrolls. The legal distinction is narrow but defensible under current NIL guidance.
What recruiters at three SEC programs now worry about: whether donor-backed collectives can compete when prospects begin valuing career optionality over guaranteed cash. Curtis chose Vanderbilt over Georgia's reported $1.2 million annual offer, a decision that makes sense only if he views the film industry as a viable post-football track. His father played briefly in the CFL; his mother works in brand consulting. The family has signaled interest in Los Angeles.
Vanderbilt's institutional advantage is geographic proximity to Nashville's entertainment economy and Bargatze's willingness to leverage his infrastructure. Other programs are studying the model. Two Power Four schools have begun preliminary conversations with country music labels about bundling recording studio access into quarterback NIL deals. A third has approached a retired NFL quarterback who now produces documentaries. None have closed a deal.
The film itself remains undefined. Bargatze's previous projects include stand-up specials for Netflix and a comedy pilot for CBS that did not proceed to series. Industry sources say his production company is shopping a family-friendly comedy to streamers, with a budget in the $15 million to $25 million range. Curtis would play a high school athlete—casting that requires minimal acting experience and fits within his NCAA eligibility window. Shooting is tentatively scheduled for summer 2026, after Curtis completes his freshman spring practice.
What to watch: whether Curtis's performance metrics at Vanderbilt—he is expected to start immediately in 2026—affect the film's financing or release strategy. Also whether the NCAA clarifies whether entertainment work tied to athletic identity constitutes impermissible inducement. The organization's latest NIL guidance, published in December, does not address third-party entertainment contracts. Vanderbilt's compliance office reviewed the deal and found no current violation. Georgia did not formally protest the recruitment outcome.
Bargatze attended Vanderbilt's spring game last April and sat in the athletic director's suite. Curtis was not yet committed. By June, Bargatze had introduced Curtis to his manager and agent at WME. The quarterback flipped his commitment in February, two weeks after Bargatze announced he was developing new film projects. The timeline is clean enough to withstand scrutiny, messy enough to tell the real story.
The takeaway
Vanderbilt used Nate Bargatze's Hollywood access to flip a five-star QB, proving entertainment equity can outbid cash collectives in NIL wars.
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