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Actor Who Played Jethro On ‘Beverly Hillbillies’ Suing CBS Over BBQ Restaurant

Not everyone has a name like “Jethro,” so it only makes sense that the guy who played Jethro Bodine on The Beverly Hillbillies would want to cash in on such a famous moniker. That’s why he’s ticked off right now at CBS, claiming the network breached a contract he had with it by allowing an Iowa restaurant chain to use the Jethro name and character.
http://consumerist.com/2014/12/11/a...ly-hillbillies-suing-cbs-over-bbq-restaurant/
 
Maybe Jethro Tull will sue Max Baer.

I'm surprised Max isn't suing Big Boy. The resemblance is uncanny.
 
Sounds like he's stretching it a bit. IIRC, Max Baer Jr (his father was Max Baer, the heavyweight boxer)had a lot of success post Beverly Hillbillies - mostly in the 70s - as a director and producer of what used to be called "B" movies - mostly low budget action films like Macon County Line, which he also acted in.
 
Sounds like he's stretching it a bit. IIRC, Max Baer Jr (his father was Max Baer, the heavyweight boxer)had a lot of success post Beverly Hillbillies - mostly in the 70s - as a director and producer of what used to be called "B" movies - mostly low budget action films like Macon County Line, which he also acted in.

More like he's justifiably bitter that being typecast as Jethro Bodine made it almost impossible for him to get work after the Beverly Hillbillies. And, it is his face. The character was created by a team of people, including writers, producers, and others. But it was Max Baer, Jr. who brought Jethro Bodine to life. There have been a great many fictional characters on TV whose likeness was licensed for commercial use. And the actors who played those characters deserve their share of the proceeds.

It's also highly insulting that the launch post of this thread merely references "Actor Who Played Jethro". Baer's name isn't even mentioned in the launch post. That is inexcusably rude.
 
There have been a great many fictional characters on TV whose likeness was licensed for commercial use. And the actors who played those characters deserve their share of the proceeds.

Typically that kind of thing is covered in the actor's contract. It's a little tough to go in after the fact and say you deserve a share.
 
Typically that kind of thing is covered in the actor's contract. It's a little tough to go in after the fact and say you deserve a share.

Typically, back in the early 1960's, contracts didn't even mention such subsequent uses of image and likeness for a barbecue restaurant. Typically, back in the early 1960's, actors were lucky to get a few years of residuals in their contracts. Actors with little or no track record getting their first break were lucky to get anything other than the standard SAG contract.

Tell me, BigA, how many acting contracts did you sign in the early 1960's.
 
Typically, back in the early 1960's, contracts didn't even mention such subsequent uses of image and likeness for a barbecue restaurant.

Maybe not specifically for a barbecue restaurant, but there was licensing of image & likeness in the 60s. Most popular TV shows had lunchboxes and other memorabilia available with character image & likeness.
 
Maybe not specifically for a barbecue restaurant, but there was licensing of image & likeness in the 60s. Most popular TV shows had lunchboxes and other memorabilia available with character image & likeness.

And quite often the actor had to sue to get his share of the proceeds. The thing is, most licensed products didn't come about until after the show became a hit, and the actors then had leverage for their agents to use. But the original contracts that most actors signed, usually when they made the pilot, didn't give them bupkis. The only exceptions were name actors with a series or two under their belts. Stars seldom had problems getting the extras they deserved for deals like this. The journeymen who played secondary characters like Jethro are another story. Buddy Ebsen would not have had a problem. Max Baer, Jr. or Donna Douglas would have.
 
And quite often the actor had to sue to get his share of the proceeds. The thing is, most licensed products didn't come about until after the show became a hit, and the actors then had leverage for their agents to use.

Beverly Hillbillies was on the air for 9 years. Some time during those 9 years, he got a contract renewal, or maybe two, when the agent had the chance to write in lots of goodies.
 
Beverly Hillbillies was on the air for 9 years. Some time during those 9 years, he got a contract renewal, or maybe two, when the agent had the chance to write in lots of goodies.

I realize you think you know everything there is to know about radio. But you are not an actor. You're talking out of your ass about something you have no personal knowledge of.
 
I realize you think you know everything there is to know about radio. But you are not an actor. You're talking out of your ass about something you have no personal knowledge of.

I was a member of AFTRA, I know contracts, and I know licensing agreements. I have some knowledge base for what I say.

If you dispute something, explain where I'm wrong. So far, I think I've addressed every point.

BTW I'm not saying this guy shouldn't sue. I imagine he thinks the restaurant will settle with him as they did with CBS. Nice quick and easy payday.
 
Again - Max Baer Jr. is not one of those former 60s TV actors who is living (or dying) in poverty, a la Dick York, or other actors who were unable to continue their careers, and suffered due to poor contracts or lack of residuals. Baer was a successful producer and director in the 70s following The Beverly Hillbillies. If you read his Wikipedia page, he seems to have been a bit of an operator-entrepreneur as well, with ideas for Jethro themed casinos, and the like. He has also been known to be litigious if his territory has been usurped, so this new announcement is not a surprise.

He's mostly retired now, but I'd bet he's financially quite well off.
 
There are all sorts of issues mixed together in an issue like this. Max Baer, Jr. played the character of Jethro, but he didn't create or own it. No doubt he's licensed Jethro from CBS or whoever owns "him," and these other promoters have too. If Baer has an exclusive deal to use the Jethro character, he would have a solid case.

Anyone remember a dust-up in the late 70's or early 80's between Clayton Moore, "The Lone Ranger," and the Wrather Corporation who then owned that character? They prevented him from appearing in public wearing the Ranger's mask, so until the case was settled, he made his appearances wearing wrap-around black sunglasses. With public opinion much in his favor, Mr. Moore eventually won out.

I was acquainted with the late "Irish" McCalla, the pin-up model who played "Sheena of the Jungle" on 1950's TV. On the advice of her friends Bill Williams and Barbara Hale, she demanded her personal-appearance rights in her contract. According to Irish, that was how she made a living and raised her sons after the show ran its course. She did in fact try to buy the Sheena character and continue producing the shows herself (Dick Powell's Four Star TV company was ready to back her) but could get nowhere. McCalla Enterprises, the company she and her sister created at that time, was later revived to manage her second career as an artist and illustrator. Irish was a naturally gifted painter, self-taught, and worked in an "Americana" style comparable to Norman Rockwell.

Max Baer was smart in moving to the production side of the business, because as with Moore and McCalla, he was hopelessly typecast with the public. I've seen some pretty pathetic examples of ex-stars on the downside shilling for some dodgy schemes. I especially remember Burt Ward (Batman's "Robin") doing a late night infomercial offering a Bell & Howell movie projector and a package of 16mm prints of those 70's grizzly-bear-and-old-trapper movies as a "business opportunity" for something like 12 grand. The idea was to make BIG BUCKS showing the movies in church basements. (Wonder who bit on that one?)
 
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I'm sure the restaurant will be featured in the real faces of lawsuit abuse. America is screaming for real tort reform. In my opinion Baer Jr, is being a little spoiled brat on this. I still watch the Beverly Hillbillies, and Jethro with his "sixth grade education" I feel he should just let this be. Why not just buy the restaurant instead of suing them, or start his own? Or will that be like "The Diner" episode?


Does Sony still have a stake in CBS? Curious.
 
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Well, the restaurant could always go with "BBQ Shack" and then Radio Shack could sue (if they could find the money to pay lawyers).
 
I mentioned it in the Radio Shack thread that some restaurant that has been using Shack in their name years before RS should sue them. :rolleyes:
 
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