Thе January 1999 issue of Playgirl magazine featured a cover photograph of actor Jose Solano, Jr., best known for his role as “Manny Gutierrez” on the syndicated television program “Baywatch” from 1996 to 1999. Solano was shown shirtless and wearing his red lifeguard trunks, the uniform of Ms “Baywatch” character, under a heading reading: “TV Guys. PRIME-TIME’S SEXY YOUNG STARS EXPOSED.” Playgirl, ostensibly focused on a female readership, typically contains nude photographs of men in various poses emphasizing their genitalia, including some showing them engaged in simulated sex acts. The magazine also contains written editorial features. Although Solano — who did not pose for or give an interview to Playgirl — did nоt in fact appear nude in the magazine, he sued Playgirl alleging it deliberately created the false impression *1081 that he did so, making it appear he was willing to degrade himself and endorse such a magazine.
The district court granted Playgirl summary judgment, finding Solano had failed to establish that Playgirl created a false impression about what readers would actually see of Solano inside the magazine or in any event that it had acted knowingly or recklessly in doing so. We disagree and reverse for a trial. At this stage of the proceedings, viewing the evidence most favorably to Solano as we must on summary judgment, we hold that he provided sufficient evidence to create triable issues of fact for the jury on the elements of each of his causes of action.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Because this case concerns the magazine cover, we describe it in some detail and append a copy of it to this opinion. (Addendum A.) As indicated above, Solano appeared bare-chested wearing his red trunks, dominating the cover. In the upper left corner was a red circle containing the words, “TV Guys,” followed by the headline, “Primetime’s Sexy Young Stars Exposed,” which ran across the' top of Solano’s head. Immediately to the left of Solano’s picture, the magazine prоclaimed, “12 Sizzling Centerfolds Ready to Score With You.” The “s” in “Centerfolds” was superimposed on Solano’s right shoulder. Also placed to the left of Solano, running down the left margin, the cover touted “Countdown to Climax: Naughty Ways to Ring in the New Year,” “Toyz in the Hood: The Best in Erotic Home Shopping” and “Bottoms Up!: Hot Celebrity Buns.” In the cover’s lower right hand corner was the headline, “Baywatch’s Best Body, Jose Solano.”
Solano’s sole appearance inside the magazine was on page 21, in a quarter-page, head-and-shoulders photograph — showing him fully dressed in a tee shirt and sweater — alongside a brief, quarter-page profile of the actor. Solano’s profile included information about his “Baywatch” character, facts about his life before he began acting and a quote in which he says that with two younger brothers he strives to be a positive role model and hopes to encourage others to pursue their dreams. Solano’s photograph and profile were part of a five-page feature entitled “TV Guys,” consisting of photographs and short profiles of 10 popular television actors. Neither Solano nor any of the other actors was shown nude. Significantly, Playgirl issues are displayed on newsstands packaged in plastic wrap tо prevent potential customers from flipping through the pages to view the magazine’s contents.
This action began when Solano filed suit against the magazine’s publisher, Playgirl, Inc., in California Superior Court, alleging Playgirl invaded his privacy by portraying him in a false light and by misappropriating his likeness in violation of California Civil Code § 3344 and common law. He claimed he was humiliated and embarrassed when he learned of the use of his photograph on the cover of Playgirl and that he suffered a decline in job offers, invitations to charity events and social contacts with others in the entertainment industry following the publication of the January 1999 issue. 1 After Playgirl removed the case to federal court, the district court granted Playgirl’s motion for summary judgment. The court found that the use of Solano’s photograph in Playgirl did not create a false impression and, in any event, as a public figure he could not show actual *1082 malice; that the public affairs exception defeated his § 3344 claim; and that the public interest exception defeated his common law misappropriation of likeness claim. The court also awarded attorney’s fees and costs to Playgirl. Solano timely appealed.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Weiner v. San Diego County,
DISCUSSION
I. The False Light Claim
Solano argues that Playgirl’s use of his photograph along with suggestive headlines on the cover conveyed the false message that Solano voluntarily posed nude for the magazine and, in doing so, implicitly endorsed the magazine and its sexually explicit content. To prevail on this false light claim, Solano must show that: (1) Playgirl disclosed to one or more persons information about or concerning Solano that was presented as factual but that was actually false or created a false impression about him; (2) the information was understood by one or more persons to whom it was disclosed as stating or implying something highly offensive that would have a tendency to injure Solano’s reputation; (3) by clear and convincing evidence, Playgirl acted with constitutional malice; and (4) Solano was damaged by the disclosure.
See Fellows v. Nat’l Enquirer, Inc.,
A. False Impression and Injury to Reputation
Solano contends that when the photograph and headlines on the cover are viewed in context — that of a magazine that features sexually suggestive nude pictures of men-there is a triable issue of fact regarding the falsity of the message conveyed by Playgirl. We agree. We addressed a publication’s creating an implied false message in
Eastwood v. Nat’l Enquirer, Inc.,
Playgirl’s reliance on
Brewer v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
Unlike
Brewer,
Solano’s claim goes much deeper. Solano contends that his bare-chested, three-quarter-length photograph alongside the suggestive headlines on the Playgirl cover created the false impression that readers could expect to find more photographs of him inside the magazine, nude — “exposеd”—in Playgirl’s typical sexually explicit and revealing mode of depicting its “sexy” male subjects. Moreover, the placement of the “12 Sizzling Centerfolds — Ready to Score With You” line, which appeared in large bold letters immediately to the left of and just touching Solano’s shoulder, could reasonably be interpreted to encompass Playgirl’s cover subject, Solano. It is , well-established that “[a] defendant is liable for what is insinuated as well as for what is stated explicitly.”
O’Connor v. McGraw-Hill,
.That Solano’s profile inside the magazine was of a relatively innocent and nonsexual nature is of little significance.
3
In
Kaelin,
we concluded that the accuracy and truth of the Globe article discussing the suspicion that Kaelin had perjured himself did not cure the false impression conveyed by the cover headline, which implied he was suspected of murder.
[W]e look to the totality of the Enquirer’s presentation of the interview and find that the editors falsely suggested to the ordinary reader of their publication — as well as those who merely glance at the headlines while waiting at the supermarket checkout counter — that Eastwood had willingly chatted with someone from the Enquirer.
B. Actual Malice
Although Solano has established a genuine issue as to whether the cover created a false impression, to survive summary judgment he must, as a public figure, also establish by clear and convincing evidence that Playgirl’s editors knowingly or recklessly created this false impression. The third element necessary to establish a claim for false light, therefore, is the constitutional requirement of actual malice.
See Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton,
[T]he actual malice standard is not satisfied merely through a showing of ill will or ‘malice’ in the ordinary sense of the term.... Nor can the fact that the de *1085 fendant published the defamatory material in order to increase its profits suffice to prove actual malice. ... Actual malice, instead, requires at a minimum that the statements were made with'a reckless disregard for the truth. And although the concept of ‘reckless disregard’ ‘cannot be fully encompassed in one infallible definition,’ we have made clear that the defendant must have made the false publication with a ‘high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity,’ or must have ‘entertained seri.ous doubts as to the truth of his publication.’
‘[R]eckless conduct is not measured by whether a reasonably prudent man would have published, or would have investigated before publishing. There must be sufficient evidence to permit the conclusion that the defendant in fact entertained sеrious doubts as to the truth of his publication. Publishing with such doubts shows reckless disregard for truth or falsity and demonstrates actual malice.’
Aisenson,
“The subjective determination of whether [the defendant] in fact entertained serious doubts as to the truth of the statement may be proved by inference, as it would be rare for a defendant to admit such doubts. A court typically will infer actual malice from objective facts. These facts should provide evidence of negligence, motive, and intent such that an accumulation of the evidence and appropriate inferences supports the existence of actual malice.”
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union,
Against this baсkdrop, we now turn to the conflicting evidence regarding the existence of actual malice on the part of Playgirl editors in ‘assembling the January 1999 issue. Playgirl associate editor Théresa O’Rourke testified in her deposition that at an October 1998 meeting to discuss the January 1999 cover, Playgirl senior vice president Carmine Bellucci generally instructed the editorial staff to “sex up” the magazine to imply that there was more nudity in the magazine than actually was there. 5 She stated that Bel-lucci wanted to “bang [readers] over the head with something like, hey, this is sexy young stars exposed” so that “people are going to want to pick up the magazine more.” According to O’Rourke, “we definitely weren’t trying to be subtle, and we knew it.” She stated that there had been discussion in the cover meetings that the cover layout implied Solano appeared nude in a centerfold inside the magazine. She said the “Primetime’s Sexy Young Stars Exposed” headline specifically sparked debate at the meetings “[b]ecause some of us did not feel like it was fair to do that.” Editor-in-chief Claire Viguerie Harth testified that the magazine’s intent with the headline was “to make a line that was sexy enough [that] people would be intrigued and want to look inside, but not to say something that the magazine was showing something that it didn’t have.”
Playgirl art director Joanne Chiara-monte emphasized that if the magazine had contained a nude photograph of Sola-no, the cover explicitly would have said so. She stated that she never thought readers would expect to see Solano in a centerfold photograph because the headline, “Bay
*1086
watch’s Best Body, Jose Solano” clearly referred to Solano’s presence in the magazine.
But see Eastwood,
O’Rourke also recalled that someone raised a concern about the “12 Sizzling Centerfolds: Ready to Score with You” headline because it occupied the space where the headline relating to the cover subject often is placed. She believed “someone’s going to think that he’s naked in there.” O’Rourke said that Bellucci tended to just “blow off’ such comments and concerns. Bellucci agreed in his deposition that Solano was a “primetime sexy young star” as those words were used in the cover headline, but denied that the editors used Solano’s photograph and the cover headlines falsely to imply that Sola-no appeared nude in the magazine.
Even if, as Playgirl asserts, Chiara-monte and Bellucci were the final decision-makers as to the content of the cover, the testimony of O’Rourke and Spiezio serve to prove that during the editorial process
someone
raised concerns about the use of Solano’s photograph alongside the suggestivе headlines; both Bellucci and Chiara-monte were aware of some staffers’ concerns that the cover might falsely imply that Solano appeared nude inside the magazine. Given that awareness and the evidence that Bellucci wanted to “sex up” the magazine to imply nudity, plainly to promote magazine sales, a jury could conclude Playgirl’s editors knowingly or recklessly published the misleading cover. Such evidence is sufficient to satisfy the actual malice standard.
See Kaelin,
This case is unlike
Hoffman v. Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.,
Cher v. Forum Int’l, Ltd.,
It is neither surprising nor fatal to Sola-no’s case that there is conflicting, circumstantial evidence that Playgirl entertained serious doubt whether the magazine cover would create the false impression that So-lano appeared nude inside the magazine. “As we have yet to see a defendant who admits to entertaining serious subjective doubt about the authenticity of an article it published, we must be guided by circumstantial evidence. By examining the editors’ actions we try to understand their motives.”
Eastwood,
C. Damages
The final element necessary to prove a case for false light is damages. A plaintiff may collect actual damages and general damages for humiliation and mental anguish and suffering.
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
In
Eastwood,
we rejected the contention that the jury’s award of $150,000 was unsupported by a record that detailed Eastwood’s extensive efforts to maintain his privacy.
II. The Misappropriation Claims
Solano alleges statutory misappropriation of his right of privacy under California Civil Code § 3344 as well as common law commercial misappropriation invasion of privacy. Under § 3344(a), a plaintiff has a cause of action when “any person ... knowingly uses another’s name, voice, signature, photograph, or likeness, in any manner, on or in products, merchandise, or goods ... without such person’s prior consent .... ” The statute also provides protection for certain uses, however, such that “a use of a name, voice, signature, photograph, or likeness in connection with any news, public affairs, or sports broadcast or account, or any political campaign, shall not constitute a use for which consent is required under subdivision (a).” Cal. Civ.Code § 3344(d) (1997). To prove a claim of common law commercial misappropriation of privacy, a plaintiff must establish the defendant’s use of plaintiffs identity, the appropriation of plaintiffs name or likeness to defendant’s advantage, commercially or otherwise, a lack of consent and resulting injury.
See Downing v. Abercrombie & Fitch,
The district court found that the public affairs/public interest newsworthiness protections exempted Playgirl from liability for using the photographs of Sola-no and thereby grаnted summary judgment for Playgirl on these claims. Even though the exceptions are to be broadly construed, the newsworthiness privileges do not apply where a defendant uses a plaintiffs name and likeness in a knowingly false manner to increase sales of the publication. The First Amendment does not protect knowingly false speech.
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Playgirl argues that summary judgment nevertheless was appropriate because Solano cannot prove the elements of lack of consent and damages for his misappropriation causes of action. We think otherwise. Thеre is enough disputed evidence to require a jury resolution. As to consent, Playgirl purchased Solano’s cover photograph from Retna, Ltd., a photograph stock house; the sale invoice for the photograph included language stating that Solano had not executed a release for the use of the image. Additionally, Solano testified in his deposition that his representatives previously had been approached by Playgirl to do a “spread” in the magazine and he had immediately declined the offer. On the other hand, Playgirl argues that Solano voluntarily posed for the photographer to garnеr free publicity and knew that the photographs would be sold to magazines for publication.
*1090
As for damages, the measure of damages available for misappropriation claims includes the economic value of the use of an individual’s name and likeness.
See Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broad. Co.,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Playgirl and remand for further proceedings.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
ADDENDUM A
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Notes
. As recently as January 2001, Playgirl continued to sell the January 1999 issue as a back issue for order from the magazine.
. Although
Kaelin
involved defamation rather than false light, it nonetheless is applicable in this context. "An action for invasion of privacy by placing the plaintiff in a false light in the public eye is in substance equivalent to a libel claim.”
Selleck v. Globe Int'l,
. Solano's profile included some mild titillating prose: "luscious Latino”; "Jose didn’t always spend his days frolicking on the beach with fake-boobed babes”; and "versatile stud.”
. The terrain is even more extensive and graphic for those who read their magazines back to front.
. Playgirl claims that O’Rourke was a low-Ievel editor without any decision-making authority. We note, however, that O'Rourke appears third from the top, under only the editor-in-chief and managing editor, in the masthead for the January 1999 issue.
. According to Playgirl, Spiezio worked for the magazine for only three and a half months before she was fired.
. When
Eastwood v. Superior Court
was decided in 1983, section 3344 applied only to an unauthorized use "for purposes of advertising products, merchandise, goods or services, or for purposes of solicitation of products ...." A 1984 amendment to section 3344 eliminated the requirement that the misappropriation must occur in a product advertisement, endorsement or solicitation.
See KNB Enter. v. Matthews,
. We do not accept Solano’s argument that Playgirl is not a news magazine and thus cannot contain content that may be deemed newsworthy. "[E]ven ‘vulgar’ publications are entitled to such guarantees.... Courts are, and should be, reluctant to define newsworthiness."
Lennon v. Flynt Distrib. Co., Inc.,
