Vanderbilt flipped Five-Star Plus+ quarterback Jared Curtis from Georgia, securing one of the signature gets in the 2026 recruiting cycle. The package includes a movie role arranged by Nashville-based comedian Nate Bargatze, who grossed over $44 million on his most recent arena tour and carries production deals with multiple streaming platforms. Curtis had been committed to Georgia since his sophomore year.
The deal marks the first documented instance of a Power Four program embedding Hollywood exposure into a quarterback NIL structure. Bargatze, a Vanderbilt alum and the school's most commercially successful entertainment figure, brokered the role directly. Details on the film project, budget, or production timeline were not disclosed. Curtis is ranked the No. 2 overall prospect in his class by most composite services and was considered a cornerstone of Georgia's post-Carson Beck era. His flip landed three weeks after Vanderbilt posted its first nine-win regular season since 1915.
The move rewrites the playbook for programs without oil money or legacy booster networks. Traditional NIL packages for five-star quarterbacks hover between $1.5 million and $3 million annually in cash guarantees, paid through collectives structured as marketing agencies. Vanderbilt's approach layers in career optionality that extends past football—useful for a position where fewer than 2% of FBS starters reach starting NFL rosters. Curtis now holds a tangible credit and industry access in a city where the entertainment economy generates $13 billion annually. For context, Georgia's NIL collective is funded largely by Atlanta real estate and Chick-fil-A family money; Vanderbilt's is smaller but increasingly tilted toward Nashville music and media figures who traffic in relationships, not wire transfers.
Bargatze's involvement also signals something larger. He is represented by WME, which has been quietly staffing a sports-adjacent division focused on crossover talent packages. His manager previously worked in athlete representation. The comedian's tour dates are routed by AEG, which also books college sports venues. The connections are deliberate. If Curtis performs, the structure becomes a template: recruit the quarterback, give him a reel, let agents and executives see him in contexts that pay after eligibility expires. Georgia loses a recruit; Vanderbilt gains a proof of concept.
Watch for coordinator staff announcements at Vanderbilt before mid-January, when early signing period commitments like Curtis typically trigger roster construction decisions. Other five-star prospects in the 2026 class are expected to field similar non-cash NIL pitches through Q1 2025. Bargatze's next Netflix special drops in March; if Curtis appears in a trailer or cold open, the model shifts from novelty to precedent. Georgia's recruiting class remains ranked No. 3 nationally, but the Curtis flip cost them the top-rated pocket passer in a cycle where quarterbacks are being priced like restricted free agents.
The cleaner question is whether other programs can replicate this without someone who sold out Madison Square Garden nine nights in a row. Vanderbilt now has the blueprint. Everyone else needs the Rolodex.