OPINION
William “Sonny” Landham claims that Defendants-Appellees Galoob Toys, Inc. (f/ k/a/ Lewis Galoob Toys, Inc.) (“Galoob”) and Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. (“Fox”) violated his Kentucky-law “right of publicity” and federal Lanham Act rights by marketing without his permission an action figure of the character he played in the movie Predator. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Galoob and Fox, and Landham timely appealed. Because we conclude that Land-ham has neither demonstrated that he has a public identity sufficient to support a claim of infringement of his right of publicity nor established a claim under the Lan-ham Act, we affirm.
I. Background
Landham is a fringe actor who has played supporting roles in several motion pictures, including 48 Hours, Action Jackson, and Maximum Force, as well as several unrated, pornographic films. This suit concerns the role of “Billy, the Native American Tracker” that Landham portrayed in Fox’s 1987 action film Predator. Landham’s employment was initially memorialized in a March 3, 1986, “Standard Cast Deal Memo” (“Memo”), which detailed only the salary, starting date, and an agreement that Landham would pay for a bodyguard for himself. Fox later delivered a “Deal Player Employment Agreement” (“Agreement”) which, among other things, assigned all merchandising rights for the Billy character to Fox. The Agreement was never signed, however, and *622 there is a dispute between the parties as to how long after Landham left for filming in Mexico the Agreement was received by his agent in the United States. Landham testified that the only contractual understanding he had with Fox was that he would act in the movie for a specified amount of money and that he would be required to pay for the bodyguard. In 1995, Fox licensed to Galoob the rights to produce and market a line of its “Micro Machines” toys based on Predator. One of these three sets of toys contained a “Billy” action figure. Because the toy is only 1.5 inches tall and has no eyes or mouth, it bears no personal resemblance to Landham. Moreover, Eric Shank, the Galoob employee who designed the toy, purposefully avoided any such resemblance. Nonetheless, Landham argues that the toy violates his right of publicity under Kentucky law and amounts to a false endorsement under the Lanham Act. The district court disagreed, finding insufficient evidence to suggest that consumers would associate the toy with Landham.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
See Allen v. Michigan Dept. of Corrections,
B. The Right of Publicity
The right of publicity is a creature of state common law and statute and originated as part of the common-law right of privacy. The Supreme Court has recognized its consistency with federal intellectual property laws and the First Amendment,
see generally Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co.,
C. Copyright Preemption
Before addressing the substance of Landham’s claim, we must address Ga-loob’s jurisdictional objection that Land-ham’s claim is preempted by the federal Copyright Act merely because the claim involves a copyrighted work — in this case, Predator. If this were true, however, state-law rights of publicity would virtually cease to exist. Section 301 of the Copyright Act provides the extent of the Act’s express preemptive force:
(a) [A]ll legal or equitable rights that are equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified by section 106 in works of authorship that are fixed in a tangible medium of expression and come within the subject matter of copyright as specified by sections 102 and 103, whether [ ... ] published or unpublished, are governed exclusively by this title. Thereafter, no person is entitled to any such right or equivalent right in any such work under the common law or statutes of any State.
(b) Nothing in this title annuls or limits any rights or remedies under the common law or statutes of any State with respect to—
(1) subject matter that does not come within the subject matter of copyright as specified by sections 102 and 103, including works of authorship not fixed in any tangible medium of expression; or [ ... ]
(3) activities violating legal or equitable rights that are not equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified by section 106.
17 U.S.C. § 301. State laws may also be impliedly preempted by the Copyright Act if they create rights that could be violated by the exercise of one of the five “exclusive [federal] rights” granted to copyright owners — reproduction, derivation, distribution, public performance, and public display,
see
17 U.S.C. § 106—or if they otherwise undermine the Copyright Act’s fundamental purpose of providing a uniform system for protecting original expression for the benefit of society at large.
See Bonito Boats,
Landham’s claim is not preempted by the Copyright Act. The Supreme Court has recognized that rights of publicity are generally consistent with the Copyright Act.
See Zacchini,
D.Contractual Assignment of Publicity Right
Fox argues that although Land-ham never signed the Agreement, its terms regarding merchandising should be enforced against him. Fox correctly argues that parties may be bound by the terms of an unsigned contract when their actions demonstrate assent to the agreement.
See Cowden Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Systems Equip. Lessors, Inc.,
E.Commercial Value of Landham’s Identity
The right of publicity is designed to reserve to a celebrity the personal right to exploit the commercial value of his own identity.
1
See Carson v. Here’s Johnny Portable Toilets, Inc.,
To succeed, then, Landham must show that a merchant would gain significant commercial value by associating an article of commerce with him. He presented no such evidence to the district court. Land-ham argues vigorously on appeal that Ga-loob’s use of Landham’s identity is itself sufficient evidence of commercial value. But this argument assumes that by identifying its toy as “Billy,” Galoob has evoked Landham’s identity in the public mind.
F.Relationship Between the “Billy” Toy and Landham’s Personal Identity
Although the right began as a protection for a celebrity’s “name and likeness,”
i.e.,
physical features, it is now generally understood to cover anything that suggests the plaintiffs personal identity.
See
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 391.170(1) (“the right of publicity ... is a right of protection from appropriation of
some element of an individual’s personality
”) (emphasis added);
Carson,
What is not as clear, however, is the point at which the identity of a fictional character becomes so synonymous with the identity of the actor playing the role that the actor may challenge the character’s exploitation. If the use of a fictional character also evokes the identity of the actor who played that character, he may challenge that use regardless of the fact that the actor’s personal notoriety was gained exclusively through playing that role.
See Wendt,
One case that may be read to depart significantly from this rule, and one upon which Landham heavily relies, is
White v. Samsung Electronics America, Inc.,
*626 Consider how sweeping this new right is. What is it about the ad that makes people think of White? It’s not the robot’s wig, clothes or jewelry; there must be ten million blond women (many of them quasi-famous) who wear dresses and jewelry like White’s. It’s that the robot is posed near the “Wheel of Fortune” game board. Remove the game board from the ad, and no one would think of Vanna White.... But once you include the game board, anybody standing beside it — a brunette woman, a man wearing women’s clothes, a monkey in a wig and gown — would evoke White’s image, precisely the way the robot did. It’s the “Wheel of Fortune” set, not the robot's face or dress or jewelry that evokes White’s image. The panel is giving White an exclusive right not in what she looks like or who she is, but in what she does for a living.
White v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.,
We decline Landham’s invitation to extend
White
to this case. First, the holding is factually distinguishable, as White used her own name in her television role, and also produced evidence that her identity was invoked and had commercial value. More importantly, we share, as we think the Kentucky courts would, Judge Kozin-ski’s unwillingness to give every individual who appears before a television or movie camera, by occupation or happenstance, the right as a matter of law to compensation for every subtle nuance that may be taken by someone as invoking his identity without first being required to prove significant commercial value and identifiability. Such a holding would upset the careful balance that courts have gradually constructed between the right of publicity and the First Amendment and federal intellectual property laws, undermining the right’s viability. We therefore decline to give Landham “an exclusive right not in what [he] looks like or who [he] is, but in what [he] does for a living.”
White,
In sum, Landham has not demonstrated — either through direct evidence or by virtue of Galoob’s use of the “Billy” character — that his persona has “significant commercial value” or that the “Billy” toy invokes his own persona, as distinct from that of the fictional character. For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendants on this claim.
G. Landham’s Claim Under the Federal Lanham Act
A false designation of origin claim brought by an entertainer under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act in a case such as this is equivalent to a false association or endorsement claim,
see Waits,
We use the following eight-factor test for determining likelihood of confusion:
1. strength of plaintiffs mark;
2. relatedness of the goods;
3. similarity of the marks;
4. evidence of actual confusion;
5. marketing channels used;
*627 6. likely degree of purchaser care;
7. defendant’s intent in selecting the mark;
8. likelihood of expansion of the product lines.
Id. These are simply guidelines to aid our analysis. “They imply no mathematical precision, and a plaintiff need not show that all, or even most, of the factors listed are present in any particular case to be successful.” Id.
Initially, Landham urges that the district court erred as a matter of law by following the Ninth Circuit’s requirement that most of the eight factors weigh in his favor before a plaintiff may succeed on his Lanham Act claim.
See Wendt,
Our findings on the right of publicity issue dictate the outcome of this claim as well. Noting that Landham had offered no evidence with regard to his name recognition among children, the district court correctly held that there was no genuine issue of fact material to the strength of Landham’s mark, and that given “the general adult nature of [Land-ham’s] past work, it does not appear that his mark possessed any significant degree of strength among that part of society relevant to this action” — the toy-buying public. Likewise, the factors accounting for the similarity of the marks, Defendants’ intent, and expansion of the product lines weigh against Landham. The court correctly found that three factors — relatedness, marketing channels, and degree of purchaser care — weighed in Landham’s favor. Our resolution of this claim, however, is not determined by numerical calculations or the weighted values of particular “factors.” These are simply objective aids for reaching a subjective conclusion as to whether the consuming public is likely to be genuinely confused about whether Landham endorsed Galoob’s “Billy” toy. For the same reasons that we found that Landham had not demonstrated the infringement of any right of publicity, we hold that he has. not established a claim under the Lanham Act.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although this is usually done by endorsing a product or service, the "right of publicity isn’t aimed at or limited to false endorsements; that's what the Lanham Act is for.”
White v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.,
