A Woman’s Work: Inside a Shocking Film on How Cheerleaders are Treated
The job required hours on hours of practice and dozens of
community events, all unpaid. The Bills made more than $250m as an organization
that year, but Pinzone had to pay $650 for her uniform, and was paid just $105
for 840 hours of work.
Pinzone quit the team in 2013. When another Jill confided
the same misgivings about the their compensation, Pinzone took her contract to
a lawyer. The meeting in late 2013 “felt like a prayer confession, almost,” she
told the Guardian. Something felt off about the contract – the Bills’ mascots,
concession workers, janitors and cleaning staff were all paid for their work
and time, yet the cheerleaders in the same stadium each week were not. But
doubt crept in. “Am I crazy?’ she thought. “Here I was signing up to be an NFL
cheerleader – such a high prestige [job],” she said, “it just never occurred to
me at all that there could be something wrong with that contract.”
A Woman’s Work: The NFL’s Cheerleader Problem, a documentary
completed in 2019 and now available on demand, probes the context for Pinzone’s
lawsuit and traces the protracted, hard-won efforts by cheerleaders across the
league to compel the NFL to fairly compensate its most visible female
employees. Since Pinzone, one of two former cheerleaders followed by film-maker
Yu Gu as they sought compensation for minimum-wage back pay and legal fees, and
four teammates filed a lawsuit against the Jills, their managers, and the Bills
in 2014, the NFL, which generated over $15bn in revenue in 2019, has come under
increased scrutiny for widespread underpayment, restrictive contracts, and
mistreatment of its cheerleaders. Ten out of the 26 NFL teams with cheerleaders
have since faced lawsuits alleging wage theft, sexual harassment, body-shaming
hostile work environments, criminally low pay (some as low as $2.85 an hour),
and “blatant discrimination”.
Like Pinzone, Thibodeaux-Fields, lithe and preternaturally
bubbly, long dreamed of being a professional cheerleader – by the time she
joined the Raiderettes in 2013, Thibodeaux-Fields had put 10,560 hours into 18
years of dance training, a body of work calculated onscreen in A Woman’s Work.
The NFL did not reward that expertise, and the terms of the job were untenable:
Raiderettes weren’t paid until the end of the season, nine months after they
began practice. Thibodeaux-Fields was expected to pay for the requisite hair,
nails and spray tan at $225 a pop and was, all told, paid less than $5 an hour
for her work, including eight-hour long shifts.
Gu first heard of Thibodeaux-Fields’s lawsuit in the Los
Angeles Times while a graduate student at the University of Southern
California. Born and China and raised in Vancouver, Gu was familiar with
cheerleading stereotypes but baffled by America’s football-obsessed culture.
Stripped of the American mythos used by teams to justify low pay – that it was
privilege to cheer in the NFL, that sisterhood and prestige were worth more
than money, that it offered visibility and had always been this way –
Thibodeaux-Fields’s case seemed straightforward, “a pathway to understand some
of the core mythologies of American culture”, Gu told the Guardian.
A Woman’s Work observes Thibodeaux-Fields and Pinzone over
five years, as the lawsuits and their echoes – the hurtful gossip on Facebook
groups, the recognition of widespread issues across the league, the slow
unlearning of “lucky to be here” gaslighting, the way recognizing it reframes
one’s whole worldview – braid into their everyday lives, at times searingly
personal. Gu’s camera finds Thibodeaux-Fields on the floor with her children,
overwhelmed with childcare and too frazzled to engage with her husband after
work. We stare from the passenger’s seat at Pinzone, days after losing her
mother – her own best friend and biggest cheerleader – to cancer, as she melts
into tears in her car.
The film’s unvarnished, lawsuit-unrelated footage
demonstrates “the consequences, the repercussions, of being mistreated in the
workplace, of being underpaid or undervalued”, said Gu. Without a Raiderette
wage, Thibodeaux-Fields was dependent on following her husband’s job and
providing childcare for their growing family. Maria balanced the stress and
time of the lawsuit with her accounting career and primary caregiving for her
mother.
Thibodeaux-Fields eventually reached a settlement with the
Raiders, but Pinzone’s case, a class-action suit joined by 73 other Jills (60
more opted out) that eventually included the NFL as a defendant, dragged on,
and is still in a tense stalemate. Days after the lawsuit was filed, the Bills
shut down the Jills, unceremoniously ending a nearly 50-year old program. “I
just couldn’t believe that they did that and turned it around on us, so we
became the bad guys,” Pinzone said. “That was really hard to navigate through.
At one point in the film, the defendants offer a low-ball settlement agreement
rather than pay fair back wages. “The fact that they thought we would accept
something so low shows what they think of us: that we’re nothing,” Pinzone says
over footage of her accompanying her father to a medical appointment.
The NFL, for all its recent work to address sexism and
racism within the league, and its 2016 “women’s summit” held in the wake of the
league’s domestic violence scandal, has punted on addressing cheerleader compensation
at the league level. Contracts and pay for the cheerleading squads are still at
the discretion of individual teams and their owners. In Gu’s view, the league
is “not justifying” the hands-off approach to safe and fair work environment
for cheerleaders, “I think because they feel like they don’t have to justify
it,” she said. Cheerleaders or no, fair pay or not, people will still watch
football. “Because the league’s stance is that it’s the responsibility of each
team, there’s just a lack of consistent rules and guidelines across the
different teams, and there’s a lack of transparency and communication between
the different teams,” Gu explained.
Still, she added, it was “heartening” to see teams change
their policies in the wake of several lawsuits – the Raiderettes have changed
their contract to abide by labor laws, and the California assemblywoman Lorena
Gonzalez, who appears in the film, introduced legislation specifically aimed at
protecting professional cheerleaders.
Some teams have “realize[d] these women are an asset to
their organization and they should be compensated for that”, said Pinzone.
Though she “had no idea when we signed up” how long the lawsuit, delayed by the
bankruptcy of one defendant and the pandemic, would go on, Pinzone is hopeful
for resolution this year. “We’re just going to keep moving forward,” she said,
“and hope that once this does get settled, that they too will bring back the
Jills and do it the right way.”
A Woman’s Work: The NFL’s Cheerleader Problem is now available
to rent digitally in the US with a UK date yet to be announced