When you think of the Natalie Portman movie Black Swan, labor rights violations might not be the first thing that comes to mind. But according to a recent ruling from a U.S. district court, the production company Fox Searchlight Pictures violated labor law by letting unpaid interns work on the film.
New York Southern District Judge William Pauley on Tuesday ruled that Eric Glatt and several other unpaid interns who worked for the studio were actually employees, and therefore entitled to at least the minimum wage.
The ruling could set a precedent for young people across the country. If Fox Searchlight’s unpaid internship program was illegal then so are many other similar programs.
Pauley’s ruling “is hugely important, because corporate America has been taking advantage of these unpaid interns for years,” said Paul Secunda, a professor of labor law at Marquette University. “Especially in this economy where people are desperate to find jobs and are subject to exploitation, people have been using these unpaid interns to save money.”
Thanks to a tight job market and a vast oversupply of college-educated young people, many students and recent graduates seek out unpaid or low-paying internships as a way of establishing a foothold in their preferred industry. There are about 1.5 million internships in the U.S. each year, according to Ross Perlin, the author of Intern Nation: How to Earn Nothing and Learn Little in the Brave New Economy. Only about half of those internships pay anything at all.
Intern compensation has been the subject of a number of legal challenges in recent years. Last month, former Harper’s Bazaar intern Xuedan Wang lost her lawsuit against Hearst Magazines. This Thursday, two former interns filed suit against publishing company Condé Nast, saying that the company failed to adequately compensate them for their labor. In all three cases, the plaintiffs are represented by the same law firm, Outten & Golden.
“It’s a pretty common misconception that it’s okay to have unpaid interns, because that’s something that’s been done for a long time,” said Outten & Turner associate Juno Turner, who is involved with both cases. “But just because something’s been done for a long time, doesn’t make it lawful.”
In order to get away with paying interns below minimum wage, said Turner, employers need to meet six very strict legal criteria derived from the Supreme Court’s 1947 Walling decision. Those criteria require that the employer “[derive] no immediate advantage from the activities of the trainees” and provide training “similar to that which would be given in a vocational school.”
When asked to defend themselves, employers of unpaid interns typically advocate for a broader interpretation of the six-point Walling test.
“You’ve got to consider a lot of different factors including these six factors,” Camille Olson, a partner at corporate law firm Seyfarth Shaw, told Wonkblog’s Dylan Matthews. She pointed to the recent ruling in Xuedan Wang v. Hearst, in which Judge Harold Baer rejected Wang’s claim that she was an employee of Hearst Magazines and therefore owed wages.









