Aundra Anderson appeals several district court rulings in this action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Oklahoma state tort law. She had sued Kimberly Lohman, a reporter from local television station KOCO-TV (“KOCO”), and the company that owns and operates KOCO (Ohio/Oklahoma Hearst-Argyle Television, Inc.) (hereinafter “the media defendants”), along with Officer Don Blake of the Norman Police Department. Anderson appeals 1) the district court’s order partially granting the media defendants’ motion to dismiss by dismissing her federal right to privacy and state intrusion upon seclusion claims, and 2) the district court’s order granting the media defendants’ motion for summary judgment on her publication of private facts claim. She contends the dis- *1231 triet court erred in concluding that the media defendants were not state actors, and in concluding that her allegations and proffered evidence failed to support her state law tort claims against them. Additionally, she challenges the district court’s denial of leave to amend her complaint to add claims against the media defendants for promissory estoppel and tortious or malicious interference with a contract. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
I.
Anderson alleges that she was raped by her estranged husband while she was unconscious. Anderson did not know of the rape until June, 2003, when she found a videotape of the incident. Anderson gave the videotape to Officer Blake and agreed to press charges after Blake promised that the videotape would be kept confidential and would be used only for law enforcement purposes. Anderson alleges that Blake told her that the only people who would see the tape would be himself, his partner, a judge, and a jury.
Before any charges had been filed in Anderson’s case, Blake gave an interview to Lohman about Anderson’s allegations. By this time, Anderson’s husband had already been arrested on other sexual assault charges involving other alleged victims. Blake showed Lohman the videotape, and Lohman asked if she could record it to obtain a “head shot” of the alleged perpetrator. Aplt. App. at 336. Blake contends that he agreed to allow Lohman to record and display the videotape’s contents on the air, so long as the broadcast was limited to a view of the perpetrator’s face and was “tasteful.” Id. at 337. Lohman promised Blake she would only use a view of the perpetrator’s face in her report.
Anderson alleges that, before the news segment aired, Blake contacted her by telephone and said that he wanted her to speak with Lohman. Anderson replied that she did not want to talk to the press, but Blake put Lohman on the telephone anyway. Anderson refused to answer most of Lohman’s questions. During their conversation, Lohman told Anderson that she had viewed the videotape. Anderson alleges that she never authorized Lohman to view or use the videotape in any way. During the 10:00 p.m. newscast of July 3, 2003, KOCO aired Lohman’s story about Anderson’s allegations, including excerpts from the videotape.
Several days after the broadcast, charges were filed against Anderson’s husband for crimes committed against Anderson. After the July 3rd KOCO broadcast, Anderson refused to cooperate with the district attorney’s office, and the charges involving Anderson were eventually dropped. Anderson then filed this § 1983 action against Blake and the media defendants. Anderson alleged that all of the defendants had violated her federal constitutional right to privacy in the videotape. She also asserted that the media defendants had invaded her privacy rights under Oklahoma tort law. 1
The district court denied Blake’s motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity, which we affirmed.
See Anderson v. Blake,
II.
A. The Media Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
We first review the district court’s order partially granting the media defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) as to Anderson’s right to privacy and intrusion upon seclusion claims. We review the district court’s order de novo and apply the same standard as the district court.
Moore v. Guthrie,
1. Anderson’s Federal Right to Privacy Claim
Anderson challenges the district court’s dismissal of her right to privacy claim for failing to allege state action. To survive as a claim arising under the federal constitution and § 1983, Anderson’s right to privacy claim must allege that the media defendants were state actors.
Scott v. Hern,
Anderson relies on the joint action test and contends she has satisfied the state action requirement by showing the media defendants acted jointly with Blake, a state actor. Private participants acting jointly with state actors can satisfy the state action requirement if the private party is a “willful participant in joint action with the State or its agents.” Id. at 1205 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). We examine “whether state officials and private parties have acted in concert in effecting a particular deprivation of constitutional rights.” Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Anderson argues that the facts alleged in her complaint evince such concerted action by claiming that the media defendants and Blake agreed to misuse Blake’s authority to obtain access to and ultimately air the confidential videotape.
Anderson’s allegations are inadequate to support her claim that the media defendants acted jointly with Blake to violate Anderson’s right to privacy by airing a confidential videotape. Anderson does not allege that the media defendants knew about the confidentiality agreement between Anderson and Blake protecting the videotape’s contents from disclosure. While Anderson asks us to infer such knowledge, she provides no basis for such an inference. Further, Anderson’s complaint fails to allege facts demonstrating a shared purpose by Blake and the media defendants to violate Anderson’s constitutional rights. At most, the complaint alleges that the parties had their own, separate goals: Blake wanted to appear on camera, and the media defendants wanted exclusive access to the investigation. See Aplt-App. at 23. Indeed, the complaint specifically disavows a shared law enforcement purpose. Id. at 13.
Anderson also argues that the media defendants became state actors because they agreed with Blake to receive the leaked portions of the videotape and to air them on the nightly news. Without more, a reporter does not become a state actor, however, simply because she has received and published information from a governmental official, as the media defendants did here.
Phelps v. Wichita Eagle-Beacon,
*1234 Blake’s telephone call to Anderson, on Lohman’s behalf, to encourage her to speak with Lohman displays a closer working relationship between Blake and the media defendants than Anderson’s other allegations. While this fact may show that Blake and the media defendants acted jointly to secure Anderson’s cooperation for an interview, it does not show joint action to violate Anderson’s constitutional rights by airing sexually explicit portions of a videotape. In fact, Anderson’s complaint alleges that Blake had already permitted the viewing and taping of the videotape by the media defendants prior to the telephone interview because Lohman told Anderson that she had “seen the entire video tape.” Aplt.App. at 20.
Anderson also cites to
Berger v. Hanlon,
While the sharing of confidential information makes Berger and the instant case superficially similar, Berger's, facts suggested a much greater degree of cooperation between government officials and reporters than is present in Anderson’s case. The federal agents in Berger “planned and executed the search in a manner designed to enhance its entertainment, rather than its law enforcement value, by engaging in, for example, conversations with [the rancher] for the purpose of providing interesting soundbites, and to portray themselves as tough, yet caring investigators, rather than to further their investigation.” Id. By these actions, the federal agents became joint participants in shaping the content of CNN’s coverage, transforming the CNN team into state actors. The most that Anderson alleges, however, is that Blake allowed the media defendants to film the videotape’s contents so that the media defendants, not Blake, could produce a head shot for the evening news. Rather than support Anderson’s argument that the media defendants became state actors for purposes of § 1983 because Blake and the media defendants acted in concert, Berger highlights what is missing in this case: facts alleging joint action between Blake and the media defendants in airing the videotape. We therefore agree with the district court’s conclusion that Anderson’s factual allegations regarding Blake’s involvement in the ultimate publication of portions of the videotape by the media defendants were insufficient to treat the media defendants as state actors.
2. Anderson’s Intrusion Upon Seclusion Claim
Turning briefly to the district court’s dismissal of Anderson’s intrusion upon seclusion claim, Anderson provides no support in her opening brief for her contention that the district court erred in dismissing this claim. See Aplt. Opening Br. at 33-35. She cites cases which set forth the elements of an “intrusion” claim, but fails to tie those cases to the facts of her case. The only other reference to her intrusion claim is in her “Statement of the Issues for Review,” where she states:
*1235 The district court erred in dismissing a state claim for “intrusion into seclusion” because release of the entire rape video to the KOCO defendants was an intentional intrusion into a private matter highly offensive to a reasonable person .... The violations of federal privacy and the state “intrusion into seclusion” were completed when Blake released the video to the KOCO defendants.
Id.
at 4-5. These arguments are not only untethered to any legal citation, but also are too conclusory to permit judicial review.
See Am. Airlines v. Christensen,
B. The Media Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment
We next turn to the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the media defendants on Anderson’s publication of private facts claim. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo under the same standard that the district court applied.
Camuglia v. City of Albuquerque,
Anderson argues that the district court incorrectly granted the media defendants summary judgment on her publication of private facts claim. Anderson alleges in her publication of private facts claim that the media defendants tortiously published private facts about her when they aired the videotape. We agree with the district court that Anderson failed to create a genuine issue of material fact as to this claim because the material published was substantially related to a matter of legitimate public concern.
Oklahoma has adopted the Restatement of Torts’ definition of publication of private facts:
One who gives publicity to a matter concerning the private life of another is subject to liability to the other for invasion of his privacy, if the matter publicized is of a kind that
(a) would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, and
(b) is not of legitimate concern to the public.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652D (1977);
McCormack v. Okla. Publ. Co.,
Even where certain matters are clearly within the protected sphere of legitimate public interest, some private facts about an individual may lie outside that sphere.... [T]o properly balance freedom of the press against the right of privacy, every private fact disclosed in an otherwise truthful, newsworthy publication must have some substantial relevance to a matter of legitimate public interest.
Id.
at 308 (emphasis added);
cf. Alvarado,
“Although application of the newsworthiness standard to undisputed facts may well present a jury question in some cases,” we can affirm the district court if objective and reasonable minds could not differ in concluding that the broadcast portion of the videotape is a matter of legitimate public interest.
Gilbert,
Anderson raises two arguments which challenge the videotape’s substantial relevance to a matter of legitimate public concern. First, Anderson argues the videotape was highly personal and intimate in nature. While the sensitive nature of the material might make its disclosure highly offensive to a reasonable person, that does not make the videotape any less newsworthy so long as the material as a whole is substantially relevant to a legitimate matter of public concern.
Alvarado,
By holding that the content of the media defendants’ newscast was substantially relevant to a matter of legitimate public interest, we do not imply that members of the media may escape any liability for publication of private facts whenever the subject of the publication is an alleged perpetrator of a crime. Some facts about the victim of an alleged crime will be too tangential to the prosecution of the perpetrator to be substantially relevant to a matter of legitimate public interest. Wherever that line may be drawn in other cases, the facts that the media defendants published in this case, for the reasons stated above, are substantially relevant to the alleged criminal activities of Anderson’s husband, a matter of legitimate public concern. The focus of the news broadcast was on the perpetrator, not the victim. And as even Anderson acknowledges in her brief, she was never identified by name, and the excerpted portion of the videotape was limited to a few movements of the alleged attacker’s naked body without disclosing the sexual acts in great detail; only Anderson’s feet and calves were clearly visible, and they bore no identifying characteristics. Aplt. Opening Br. at 11. We can understand entirely why Anderson found the public display of any portion of the tape highly distressing, perhaps especially after having received Blake’s assurance that it would be viewed by only himself, his partner, a judge, and a jury. But it is also difficult to see how the broadcast at issue could be said to have no legitimate public interest — the test we must apply. Had the broadcast gone further in invading Anderson’s privacy, rather than focusing on her estranged husband’s wrongdoing, we would have had a very different case. But the simple fact is that this was a broadcast about a rapist, not a rape victim, and the legitimate privacy interests of the two could not be more different.
Anderson also argues that a declaration by Prof. Melinda Levin of the University of North Texas — reporting her conclusion that the videotape was unnew-sworthy — creates a genuine issue for trial. We disagree for two reasons. First, Prof. Levin opines on whether the news broadcast was “newsworthy” or an issue of “public concern.” But this determination, based on the undisputed facts in the record, is the ultimate question of law before us. While expert witnesses may testify as to the ultimate matter at issue, Fed. R.Evid. 704(a), this refers to testimony on ultimate facts; testimony on ultimate questions of law, i.e., legal opinions or conclusions, is not favored.
See, e.g., Specht v. Jensen,
C. Anderson’s Motion to Amend
Anderson moved to amend her complaint against the media defendants to add a promissory estoppel claim and a tortious or malicious interference with a contract claim. The district court denied her motion, concluding that the new allegations were an effort to avoid the constitutional limitations on her claims.
We review the denial of a motion to amend for abuse of discretion.
Tool Box, Inc. v. Ogden City Corp.,
Anderson’s proposed amendments would be futile because the two new claims would be subject to dismissal. Anderson’s interference claim alleges that she and Blake had an agreement to keep the videotape confidential and that the media defendants induced Blake to breach that agreement. In Oklahoma, tortious or malicious interference with a contract has the following elements: (1) “a business or contractual right with which there was interference”; (2) “the interference was malicious and wrongful, and that such interference was neither justified, privileged nor excusable” (emphases omitted); and (3) “damage was proximately sustained as a result of the complained-of interference.”
Morrow Dev. Corp. v. Am. Bank & Trust Co.,
Anderson’s promissory estoppel claim seeks recovery for the media defendants’ alleged violation of an agreement between them and Blake to use only a “head shot” of the attacker on the evening news. Oklahoma has adopted the Restatement (Second) of Contracts (1981) version of the cause of action, which provides:
A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee or a third person and which does induce such action or forbearance is binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.
§ 90(1);
Barber v. Barber,
Anderson’s proposed promissory estop-pel claim fails because she only alleges emotional distress damages. Oklahoma courts have held that a claim seeking only damages for emotional distress fails in the absence of physical injury.
Seidenbach’s, Inc. v. Williams,
III.
The district court’s rulings are AFFIRMED. Anderson’s motion for leave to submit a CD-ROM of the broadcast under seal is GRANTED.
Notes
. Anderson originally filed suit against the City of Norman as well, but the City was dismissed from the case because it turned over to Anderson all copies of the videotape that it possessed, which was the sole relief that Anderson sought against the City.
. Anderson contends that our 2006 decision controls the result in this separate appeal. The previous panel, however, did not reach the issues regarding state action that form the core of
this
appeal because there was no dispute that Blake, as a police officer, was a state actor. While Anderson points to lan
*1232
guage in the 2006 decision stating that the complaint’s allegations "adequately support an inference of an affirmative link” between Blake's conduct "and any constitutional violation caused by the reporter's decision to broadcast the tape,”
Anderson,
. At that point in the litigation, there was a remaining unadjudicated § 1983 claim against Blake.
