LOS ANGELES — Once a year, law professor Moraima ''Mo'' Ivory usually brings celebrities like Steve Harvey, Ludacris and Rick Ross into her Georgia State University classroom for some entertainment legal talk. But this time, she's taking her next lesson across the Atlantic Ocean, from Atlanta to the Paris Olympics.
Ivory and her law students will head to the Summer Games in late July for a weeklong, all-expenses-paid trip funded primarily by a Delta Airlines donation. The students in her Legal Life course will study the business and legal issues related to the Olympics.
''We normally have celebrities, but I wanted to move into the sports world,'' said Ivory, the director of the school's entertainment, sports and media law program, which she started in 2019. ''I thought it would be interesting to study the Olympics as the focal point of the class and go through all the ramifications of the Games.''
During the semester, Ivory brought in guest speakers like the general counsel of the U.S. Olympic Committee, Olympian Edwin Moses and civil rights icon Andrew Young — Atlanta's mayor during the 1996 Summer Olympics. Her students have learned about adhering to the laws of the host city, NBC's exclusive U.S. broadcast contract, corporate governance, intellectual property ownership, security protocols and how the International Olympic Committee functions.
After touching down in Paris, Ivory and more than 30 students expect to explore the Olympic Village, visit Team USA House, attend the opening ceremony, check out Olympic sponsorship sites and spend time at a local law school. They'll also embark on a scavenger hunt around Paris, seeking all trademarks the class studied throughout the semester.
''This is having sort of an immersive education,'' said Hannah Nodar, 24, a second-year law student and Ivory's graduate research assistant. Hoping to venture into sports and entertainment law, she's looking forward to learning more about security regulations and sponsorship deals.
''I think it's more practical, especially in a legal sense. I think it's really cool to be able to go into an interview and describe what a licensing agreement is or what a record deal entails,'' she continued. ''You're able to have a more authentic conversation. You understand what you're talking about as opposed to just regurgitating stuff that's coming out of a book.''
Nodar said she's grateful to have a professor like Ivory, who wanted her students to hear directly from stars and veteran lawyers on negotiating the deals, contracts and legal concepts behind their brands. She started her course in 2019 with Ludacris as a featured speaker before bringing in Kandi Burress, Harvey and Ross. Others who have made appearances include DJ Drama and Steve Sadow, the lead attorney for former President Donald Trump in the Georgia election interference case.