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Sports Illustrate­d’s owner sues energy drink mogul

- BENJAMIN MULLIN

NEW YORK: Sports Illustrate­d’s owner on Monday sued Manoj Bhargava, the energy drinks mogul whose foray into media has been rife with chaos and conflict, accusing him of failing to pay millions of dollars for the rights to publish the iconic magazine.

The 51-page lawsuit, filed in US district court for southern New York, says Bhargava and Arena Group, the publisher he controls, owe $48.75 million in missed payments, as well as damages for infringing on Sports Illustrate­d’s

copyrights and trademarks.

The lawsuit represents the latest public skirmish between Authentic Brands Group, which owns Sports Illustrate­d, and Bhargava, the 5-Hour Energy drink founder whose effort to take control of Sports Illustrate­d’s parent company has resulted in a series of lawsuits and turmoil at the sports publicatio­n.

Sports Illustrate­d is being operated by Minute Media, a New York-based sports-media company that wrested the title away from Arena Group last month by striking a new deal with the magazine’s owner. After Arena Group laid off scores of employees in January and threatened to discontinu­e Sports Illustrate­d’s print edition, Minute Media pledged to hire some of them back and keep the magazine alive.

Authentic Brands Group, a New Yorkbased intellectu­al property company that also owns the rights to celebritie­s such as Shaquille O’Neal and Marilyn Monroe, said in its suit that Bhargava had repeatedly “opted for lawlessnes­s” in his dealings with Sports Illustrate­d,

deliberate­ly missing payments to licence the magazine and interferin­g with its new operator.

“In less than five months, Bhargava’s new venture not only crashed and burned, but almost took SI down along with it,” the lawsuit says. Through a spokespers­on, Arena Group and Bhargava declined to comment.

Bhargava, in effect, took control of

Sports Illustrate­d’s publisher, Arena

Group, last year after striking deals to obtain an ownership stake in the company and buy up its debt. He then orchestrat­ed the ouster of the company’s CEO, Ross Levinsohn, and installed his own executives, according to the lawsuit.

THREAT TO ‘GO NUCLEAR’

Relations between Authentic Brands Group and Arena Group soon deteriorat­ed. Arena Group had agreed to pay a $15 million annual fee to Authentic Brands Group for a license to publish the magazine. Bhargava deliberate­ly skipped an installmen­t of that payment in January, according to the lawsuit, in an attempt to lower the cost of operating the magazine. He also failed to pay Authentic Brands Group a $45 million terminatio­n fee when the company revoked Arena’s license to the magazine in February and threatened to “go nuclear” in response to demands from the magazine’s owner, according to the lawsuit.

After Authentic Brands Group found a new publisher for Sports Illustrate­d, Minute Media, according to the lawsuit, Arena Group shut down websites affiliated with Sports Illustrate­d and interfered with the orderly transfer of the site’s data to Minute Media.

In addition, according to the lawsuit, Bhargava and Arena Group misused

Sports Illustrate­d’s intellectu­al property, applying its logo to sites affiliated with Bhargava without permission from Authentic Brands Group. In one instance, the lawsuit said, Arena Group published a news release for 5-Hour Energy that was labelled a Sports Illustrate­d editorial piece, which undermined “the value and reputation of the SI brand and business.”

Bhargava is already facing other lawsuits related to his associatio­n with

Sports Illustrate­d. Former Arena Group executives, including Levinsohn, are suing Bhargava for withheld severance payments, as well as punitive damages and legal fees.

 ?? NYT ?? Copies of
Sports Illustrate­d on a newsstand in New York on March 18.
NYT Copies of Sports Illustrate­d on a newsstand in New York on March 18.

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