Suit: Bills Cheerleaders Were Taught How To Wash

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Now come five Buffalo Jills, joining the growing list (http://deadspin.com/rules-for-ben-gals-cheerleadersno-panties-no-slou-1522379579) of NFL cheerleaders (http://deadspin.com/heres-every-finable-offensefor-raiders-cheerleaders-1507336361) suing their team for allegedly flouting state and federal employment laws.
In many ways, their story shows how standardized these practices have become. But in terms of
micromanagement, neither of the other cheerleading teams quite matches Buffalo's, whose Jills were apparently
instructed on "how to properly wash 'intimate areas.'"
(http://deadspin.com/rules-for-ben-gals-cheerleaders-no-panties-no-slou-1522379579)
Looks like that Raiderettes lawsuit was just the beginning. Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader Alexa Brenneman has filed
her own class-action lawsuit… Read… (http://deadspin.com/rules-for-ben-gals-cheerleaders-no-panties-no-slou1522379579)
(http://deadspin.com/heres-every-finable-offense-for-raiders-cheerleaders-1507336361)
Lacy T., a Raiderette during the recently completed season, has sued the Oakland Raiders for a slew of shoddy business
practices regarding… Read… (http://deadspin.com/heres-every-finable-offense-for-raiders-cheerleaders-1507336361)
The complaint, which you can find below, lays out the case against the team, as well as two other outfits, Citadel
(owners of a radio station) and Stejon. (Long story short, since 1986, the Bills have outsourced management of
their cheerleaders to various third parties; Citadel and Stejon were two such parties when the cheerleaders in
question were cheering.) The Jills were given a lengthy handbook outlining the various rules and regulations
they had to abide by, under threat of penalty, according to the lawsuit.
z65. In addition to the rules previously cited, defendants also provided the Jills with rules regarding
general hygiene and body maintenance (a list of 17 rules), appearance etiquette (17 rules), conversation
starters for appearances and general etiquette, etiquette for formal dining (25 rules), and rules for
communicating with people with disabilities (17 rules).
66. The extensive rulebook set forth by defendants includes, inter alia, rules on how much bread to eat
at a formal dinner, how to properly eat soup, how much to tip restaurant waiters, wedding etiquette,
how to properly wash "intimate areas," and how often to change tampons.
Advice to live by, I'm sure—but stuff your mother probably told you about before you showed up to cheerleader
tryouts.
(http://deadspin.com/nfl-cheerleading-is-a-scam-a-former-ravens-cheerleader-1509840273)
As a glimpse into the dark side of NFL cheerleading, the recent Raiderettes lawsuit was revelatory, but it didn't quite
capture the soup-to-nuts … Read… (http://deadspin.com/nfl-cheerleading-is-a-scam-a-former-ravens-cheerleader1509840273)
As in all our other examples, the cheerleaders' physical appearance was scripted down to the last fingernail
("must be maintained with a French manicure or natural polish"). Instead of the weekly weigh-ins we saw with
the Ravenettes (http://deadspin.com/nfl-cheerleading-is-a-scam-a-former-ravens-cheerleader-1509840273),
Jills were subjected to the "Jiggle Test," according to the suit:
62. In addition, the Jills were subjected to weekly "physique evaluations" during which defendants'
representatives tested the Jills' bodies for "jiggling." During the "Jiggle Test" defendants scrutinized the
women's stomach, arms, legs, hips, and butt while she does jumping jacks. The physique evaluations
largely determine whether or not any particular Jill would be allowed to perform at the Bills' next
home game. Jills that failed to meet defendants' physical standards received warnings, and in some
cases were penalized, suspended or dismissed.
One cheerleader describes a time she was told to "tone up" her body after one such evaluation. She began a
stringent diet and exercise plan, only to be accused later of anorexia. No, the cake is not yours, so you can't eat it,
either.
The legal problems, of course, arise from the payment situation—when there was payment, that is. Jills were not
paid for working game days. Neither were they paid for the mandatory biweekly practice sessions that usually
lasted eight hours in total, according to the suit. On average, the cheerleaders involved in the suit averaged only
a few hundred dollars per season, the highest amount being $1,800, the lowest $150. Not surprisingly, the lady
who made $150 didn't cheer the next year.
The only real money lay in appearances. But, again, most of the time those didn't pay. The cheerleaders were
required to make 30-odd free appearances a season, and the powers that be had sole control over who was
selected for one of the profitable paid gigs. Not that the Bills, Citadel, and Stejon went unpaid for providing
cheerleaders. According to the complaint, Stejon made $10,000 per sponsorship—sponsored clients made up the
bulk of the unpaid appearances—and last season the team had at least 11 such arrangements.
There were other events. The cheerleaders host an annual "Junior Jills" program in three cities, where young
girls are taught the basics of cheering. The suit says 300-400 girls attend these camps and pay as much as $250
a pop to show up. The Jills did not receive payment.
The grossest event the Jills had to endure was the annual golf tournament:
A. The Jills Annual Golf Tournament–Select Jills were required to wear a bikini, and then go into a
dunk tank, where they were dunked in water by the golf tournament participants. Jills cheerleaders
are also "auctioned off" like prizes at this event, and had to ride around with the winning bidder in his
golf cart for the duration of the tournament. While serving as a "bought person" they were subjected to
additional demeaning treatment, including degrading sexual comments and inappropriate touching.
Oftentimes, the Jills were forced to sit on participants' laps because there was not enough seats in the
golf carts. The golf tournament also featured a "Flip for Tips" component, wherein participants paid
gratuities to watch select Jills do backflips and acrobatics for the gratification of the crowd. (The Jills
did not receive any of the tip money).
Not that "The Man Show" was any picnic, either. In that event, held at a casino, the cheerleaders were led around
the floor in their bikinis to the delight of the guys in attendance. Like the Jills Annual Golf Tournament, "The
Man Show" was an unpaid event.
If you want more on the schedule of penalties inflicted on the cheerleaders, the familiar calendar scheme, and
the various other indignities, you should read the whole complaint.
Buffalo Jills Suit (http://www.scribd.com/doc/219686805/Buffalo-JillsSuit?secret_password=26wsludm7o444go22x20)