Tools
Change country:

Caitlin Clark’s staggeringly low starting salary, briefly explained

Clark (left) and Engelbert (right) pose in front of a purple backdrop, holding up a black jersey with the number 1 printed on it in yellow, on April 15, 2024, in Brooklyn, New York.
Caitlin Clark and WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert pose for a photograph after Clark was selected first overall pick by the Indiana Fever during the 2024 WNBA Draft at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York.  | Mike Lawrence/NBAE/Getty Images

The WNBA draft puts pro basketball’s longstanding pay gap on stark display.

Caitlin Clark, a college basketball phenom and the top pick at Monday’s WNBA draft, will make a staggeringly low salary in her rookie year compared to her NBA counterpart.

Despite her record-breaking performance in the NCAA and the energy that she’s generated for the sport, Clark’s base salary will be $76,535 as a rookie. In the NBA, meanwhile, the first draft pick is expected to make roughly $10.5 million in base salary their first year.

Players like Clark, who was picked by the Indiana Fever Monday night after multiple blockbuster seasons as a point guard for the University of Iowa Hawkeyes, and former Louisiana State University forward Angel Reese, who was signed by the Chicago Sky, have helped women’s college basketball achieve a landmark year. For the first time ever, the women’s final March Madness game, which drew as many as 24 million viewers, surpassed the viewership of the men’s final.

“It’s been catapulted this year to a whole new level,” says University of Michigan sports management professor Ketra Armstrong. “People are tuning in to the WNBA draft that never had before.”

The fresh attention for the WNBA draft, however, is also spotlighting the problems the league has had with pay equity. For years, the WNBA’s salaries have lagged the NBA’s by a massive margin. That’s due in part to the leagues’ differences in revenue and season lengths. But other factors, like differences in collective bargaining agreements and revenue-sharing, also play a big role.

Because of how closely sports observers are following Clark, some fans have raised questions about these issues — and her role in addressing them. “Can Caitlin Clark fix the WNBA and NBA pay gap?”, one Forbes article asked.

That framing misunderstands some of the central causes of the gap, however. While Clark and Reese could well bring more eyes to WNBA games, the issue of pay gaps is an institutional one. As such, it’s not in the power, nor is it the responsibility, of any one player to solve.

“The challenges facing women athletes, from pay disparities to limited media coverage, stem from entrenched societal norms [and] institutional biases … that cannot be remedied by the actions of one individual alone,” says Georgetown University sports industry management professor La Quita Frederick.

The pay-gap problem is bigger than any one player

Despite her record-breaking performance in the NCAA and the energy that she’s generated for the sport, Clark will earn less than 1 percent of what her male counterpart will make in her first year. She will be able to supplement her salary through endorsement and marketing deals, but even with those, her estimated earnings will be lower than the base salary of a first-round NBA pick.

Clark isn’t alone. WNBA star Brittney Griner — who spent months jailed in Russia — spoke about the reason she played abroad in the offseason, and noted that a big part of it was to supplement her income: “I’ll say this ... the whole reason a lot of us go over is the pay gap,” she said at a press conference in April 2023. In 2023, a WNBA player made a $113,295 base salary on average, while an NBA player made an average base salary of $9.7 million.

The NBA’s much larger revenue is part of the reason for this discrepancy: It takes in an estimated $10 billion annually, compared to the WNBA, which has been projected to bring in roughly $200 million. Its season is also about twice the length of the WNBA’s, including 82 games compared to 40 games. Those factors alone, however, don’t tell the full story.

A major source of pay inequity also stems from the collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) the players’ unions have with the two leagues — and the amount of revenue they get to share.

As Eden Laase explains for Just Women’s Sports, male players are guaranteed a much larger share of revenue than women are, meaning they make more as the league grows. Because of how their CBA is structured, NBA players are able to receive 50 percent of all “shared revenue,” which includes everything from ticket sales to broadcasting rights. WNBA players, however, don’t receive the same guarantees.

Instead, WNBA players get 50 percent of “incremental revenue,” which is defined as revenue that exceeds the targets the league has set for itself. As Bloomberg has found, the league has not met those targets, meaning WNBA players have not reaped any of these rewards.

All told, about 40 percent of all NBA league revenue goes to player salaries, while the WNBA puts roughly 10 percent of all league revenue toward its players’ salaries, according to an estimate from David Berri, an economist at Southern Utah University who is the co-author of a forthcoming book about women’s sports.

Because of these disparities, WNBA players are pushing to change their compensation arrangement. “We are not asking to get paid what the men get paid. We’re asking to get paid the same percentage of revenue shared,” Las Vegas Aces player Kelsey Plum said on The Residency Podcast in 2022. Players will next have a chance to negotiate for that change in 2025, which is the earliest they can opt out of the current agreement.

Separately, expanding the WNBA’s fanbase could also help the players gain more leverage in negotiations and potentially enable the league to hit its revenue targets. Stars like Clark and Reese could help with these goals, with the Indiana Fever already seeing a spike in ticket interest ahead of this week’s draft, for example.

But it can’t be just them. Truly growing the league would require the NBA, WNBA owners, and WNBA leadership to invest more in increasing exposure for the game and providing resources to players, experts say. Such efforts could come in the form of more marketing, corporate sponsorships, and better broadcast deals in order to continue building interest and excitement in the league. Already, such moves are underway: In 2022, the WNBA raised $75 million from investors, including funds it intends to use for marketing and ads.

“In order to make money, you have to spend money,” Pepperdine University sports administration professor Alicia Jessop told Marketplace in 2020. “When the NBA began, its seats were not filled. It was not driving millions of viewers. The difference is more money was spent to build that league.”

To ensure that players benefit as the league grows, important changes need to be made to their contracts, too.


Read full article on: vox.com
Disney’s Pixar cutting nearly 200 jobs, will focus exclusively on feature films, cut streaming series
Disney CEO Bob Iger has scaled back spending on original streaming content to lift Disney+ to profitability.
5 m
nypost.com
Laughter at Bengal Cat's Hilarious Way of Getting Revenge on Dog
"Thankfully, he has never gone anywhere else inappropriate," Skeeter's owner from Queensland, Australia, told Newsweek.
6 m
newsweek.com
Dad won’t see this gift coming: A temperature-controlled Ember Mug
Drink piping hot coffee, sip after sip.
7 m
nypost.com
Construction Complete On New High-Speed Rail Tunnel
A 14-mile high-speed rail tunnel has been finished in China after 10 years.
7 m
newsweek.com
Anya Taylor-Joy Talks The Use Of AI In ‘Furiosa’ on ‘Live’: “It’s Strange To See Your Eyes And Mouth On Somebody Else’s Face”
""But to be fair, this is what George [Miller] wanted. And it is seamless."
7 m
nypost.com
$2,500 Ragdoll Meets Stray Cat for the First Time—Reaction Is Priceless
Purebred ragdolls are not just expensive to buy, they're also expensive to keep, with monthly expenses for the cats ranging from $265 to $750.
9 m
newsweek.com
MAGA Lawyer Gets Dismantled by His Own Damning Trump Emails
Seth Wenig/APDonald Trump made the curious decision to put on a single relevant witness at his New York trial, opting for a MAGA loyalist tangentially involved in the porn star hush money saga—a strategy that failed spectacularly when his testimony only further incriminated the former president.Robert Costello’s role in the Stormy Daniels affair is comedic recursion, a legal version of the Yo Dawg meme. When the feds in 2018 tried to flip then-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, Costello was the New York lawyer who tried to keep him from cooperating—a cover-up to hide the way Cohen had faked legal invoices, which was itself a cover-up of the hush money payment, which was a cover-up to stop the woman from ruining Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.For a brief moment in 2018, Costello tried to become Cohen’s lawyer and his “backchannel” to the powerful politician who might corruptly be able to protect him by sidelining the FBI investigation. The idea was to have Cohen represented by Costello, who was close friends with Rudy Giuliani, who was advising the Trump White House—a plan copiously detailed in emails.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Patty Arvielo Is Living Her Family's American Dream as a Top Mortgage CEO
"We are always very future-looking because I need this platform to be sustainable for all my employees and their families," Arvielo told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Of course Rihanna’s socks cost over $1K
The "Diamonds" singer was spotted outside the Carlyle Hotel in NYC sporting some unusual footwear.
nypost.com
Nikki Glaser reveals the real reason Kim Kardashian was booed at Tom Brady roast
The reality star was in the middle of roasting the NFL legend onstage on May 5 when she had to pause as a roar of boos erupted, which Netflix later edited out.
nypost.com
Forget everything you think you know about what the Trump jury will do
As the former president’s trial wraps up, it’s time to acknowledge that the public experience is vastly different than the jurors’.
washingtonpost.com
Bayley’s push for second WWE Evolution show comes at perfect time despite one potential roadblock
Bayley is right about it being time for a second Evolution show. It's long overdue, but it could initially face a significant hurdle.
nypost.com
‘The Apprentice’ Director Defends Biopic That Shows Donald Trump Assaulting His Ex-Wife, Getting Cosmetic Surgeries: “I Don’t Necessarily Think This Is A Film He Would Dislike”
“Everybody talks about him suing a lot of people — they don’t talk about his success rate though, you know?" director Ali Abbasi said of the Sebastian Stan-led feature.
nypost.com
Defense rests without Trump taking the witness stand in his New York hush money trial
Former President Trump did not stop to speak to reporters as he left the New York courthouse. He is charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
latimes.com
One of Our Greatest Types of TV Shows Is Now an Endangered Species
TV was once replete with shows that reflected and prescribed what it meant to be a teen. Not anymore.
slate.com
Google, Meta, OpenAI pledge to develop AI safely at global summit
South Korea's presidential office said nations had agreed to prioritize AI safety, innovation and inclusivity.
nypost.com
"Incognito" founder nabbed, allegedly sold $100 million of drugs online
The Justice Department called the site on the dark web "one of the largest illegal narcotics marketplaces on the internet."
cbsnews.com
Woman Questions Sense of Style After Buying 'Ugliest Thing' at Thrift Store
"Thrifted IS a style," commented one user on the TikTok video, which has 2.5 million views.
newsweek.com
Woman Invites Mom To See Sunset, but There Is a Problem: 'Sorry'
Social media users were in stitches over the scene in the viral clip, with one writing "I needed that giggle today."
newsweek.com
Severe Tornado Warnings Across Midwest After Nebraska Pounded With Huge Hail Stones
The National Weather Service said hail stones measuring up to 2 inches fell on the city of Grand Island.
newsweek.com
How a Former Red Sox Player Was Busted in Florida Child Sex Sting
Austin Maddox is being held in jail for four charges related to soliciting sexual acts from a minor.
newsweek.com
Princess Charlotte's Full Titles: From Cambridge to Wales
Charlotte's titles changed after the death of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022.
newsweek.com
Jenn Fessler Is the Savior of ‘The Real Housewives of New Jersey’
Rich Polk/Getty ImagesThe Real Housewives of New Jersey is in a most precarious state. We’ve suffered from the same cast for 873 years, and change is strictly forbidden in the bylaws of the Teresa/Melissa hierarchy.But a Trojan Horse has arrived to save the day. A brash queen who’s not threatened by the strictly drawn team lines, with a sense of humor long lost on this humorless show, Jenn Fessler is a breath of fresh air in an otherwise tepid season. And she’s doing all that as a friend-of the Housewives.There may be little praise worth giving the slow-starting Season 14 thus far, as the status quo remains firmly intact, and both sides of the Teresa/Melissa chasm are making solid cases to be booted before Bravo gives the show a fresh set of paint next year. But Jenn has existed on the periphery of this divide since she joined the show last season, managing to avoid the teams mentality that has doomed the franchise.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Costs to Arizona taxpayers to reach $314 million in racial profiling verdict against then-sheriff
The taxpayer costs for the racial profiling verdict arising from then-Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s immigration crackdowns are expected to reach $314 million.
latimes.com
Owners Can't Cope With Elderly Chihuahua Demanding It's Time for Bed at 6pm
Daisy's owner told Newsweek that the Chihuahua did win the bedtime battle in the end.
newsweek.com
Terrified passengers recall moment of ‘dramatic drop’ on deadly Singapore Airlines flight: ‘Awful experience’
Terrified passengers have recalled the petrifying moment a Singapore Airlines flight plunged suddenly due to turbulence on Tuesday -- leaving one man dead and others bloodied and screaming out in pain.
nypost.com
Woman Reveals Why Her Mother-in-Law Is Her Biggest Flex
The poster's mother-in-law texts her twice a week while she's at work, but she is more than happy to receive them.
newsweek.com
Donald Trump Suffered 'Devastating' Day: Defense Attorney
Trump's hush money trial continued this week with testimony from Robert Costello, a former legal adviser to Michael Cohen.
newsweek.com
Caitlin Clark’s ‘problematic’ fame is about ‘race and sexuality’: Jemele Hill
Caitlin Clark owes some of her "worth" as a marketable WNBA player to her race and sexuality, according to former ESPN host Jemele Hill.
nypost.com
Chimpanzee throws dropped sandal back to zoo visitor in bananas video
The "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" might not be far off.
nypost.com
Anne Hathaway pairs Gap shirt dress with millions in Bulgari diamonds
The "Idea of You" actress, 41, wore the high-low look for an event in Rome, Italy.
nypost.com
Texas City Faces Hundreds of Squatters Cases
A state senator in Texas said legislators were looking for ways to tackle the issue.
newsweek.com
Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart’s wives reflect on season after Knicks’ crushing playoff loss
One day after the Knicks fell to the Pacers in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, the wives of Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart shared touching tributes on social media.
nypost.com
Nestle to launch food products that cater to Wegovy and Ozempic users
Vital Pursuit will include whole-grain bowls, protein pasta, sandwich melts and gluten-free options.
cbsnews.com
Donald Trump Scores Series of Wins Amid Legal Problems
The Republican's 2024 campaign is reportedly outraising President Joe Biden while also beating the incumbent in the polls.
newsweek.com
Hollywood’s Most Pessimistic Blockbuster Franchise
In 2011’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes, the intelligent chimpanzee Caesar (played by Andy Serkis) bellows “No!” at one of his captors before striking him across the face. Despite the scene’s inevitability—the film’s title alone is a spoiler—Caesar’s defiance arrives as a shock. He becomes, for a moment, genuinely awesome to behold, at once inspiring and terrifying. Even the apes around him seem uncertain at first whether to cheer him on or cower in fear.A scene of a character surprising others by speaking has appeared again and again throughout the series, each a suspenseful callback to a pivotal moment from the original 1968 film, which spawned a run of B movies through the 1970s. But Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, the latest entry in the rebooted franchise that began with Rise, makes the twist land like a punch line. When a seemingly feral human calmly asserts that she has a name, she does so after the two apes accompanying her have just been discussing how she can’t possibly speak. Both of them go slack-jawed in response to her words, freezing comically. One of them, an orangutan, drops his possessions.As with any other big-budget franchise, the rebooted Planet of the Apes films have their hallmarks: epic ape-human showdowns, superb motion-capture performances, disarmingly soulful orangutans. (I’d do anything for sweet Maurice.) Unlike most ongoing blockbuster series, however, the recent Apes films are rather grim in tone; ape domination can’t happen without the humans being defeated, after all, in this case by a virus accidentally created in a lab that made simian test subjects intelligent and humans less so. The spectacle, too, looks little like typical popcorn fare: There are no tricked-out cars being driven, no superheroes taking flight, no movie stars pulling off death-defying stunts.Yet the rebooted franchise is now four films in, with Kingdom crossing $200 million globally at the box office in its first two weekends, becoming the fourth-highest-grossing film of the year. Audiences apparently can’t quit Apes, and it’s easy to see why. This is the rare series that can shape-shift with particular agility from one film to the next, dependent not on delivering more spectacular set pieces but rather on exploring headier ideas from different angles. Speech is an act of defiance in one entry; in another, it’s a humorous revelation. The films are, to varying degrees of success, big-budget thought exercises, poring over the same fundamental questions: What is the true value of humanity? Is intelligence something to be welcomed—or feared?Trying to figure out answers to such questions from the perspective of the apes makes even the most formulaic story beats feel fresh. The apes have their own hierarchy, beliefs, and customs, some of them derived from humans—making the apes an unpredictable yet oddly familiar observer of Homo sapiens behavior. In 2014’s Dawn, their intelligence and similarities to humans allowed for profound interspecies connection while unlocking a buried hatred in the simian antagonist, Koba (Toby Kebbell). In 2017’s War, Caesar’s brilliance helped him guide his fellow apes to freedom, but not before it led him down a path of nearly self-destructive revenge. These movies posit that the intelligence and humanity gained by the apes led to both betterment and corruption, a journey to enlightenment paralleling our own. By watching them try to build a utopian society, we’re essentially watching an anthropological dissection of ourselves.[Read: 17 indie films you must see in 2024]Over and over, the films illustrate how the laws the apes attempt to follow are vulnerable to cruelty and misinterpretation. Caesar declared that “ape not kill ape,” yet he broke his own rule in Dawn and became haunted by his actions in War. “Knowledge is power” is another tenet of simian society—it’s scrawled on a wall in the ape settlement seen in Dawn—but Koba’s discovery of human weapons led to suspicion, misunderstanding, and eventual carnage. Kingdom sharply interrogates Caesar’s greatest principle established in Rise, that “apes together strong.” Set hundreds of years after Caesar’s death, the film examines how important historical figures can become abstracted into myth over time, to be misrepresented by some and entirely forgotten by others. Its villain, an ape who calls himself Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand), contorts Caesar’s rally cry by kidnapping other clans of apes so they’ll be organized under his authoritarian rule.The Apes franchise, then, captures the way humanity’s worst impulses overwhelm its best intentions. Greed in Rise, violence in Dawn, oppression in War, dishonesty in Kingdom—these are bleak themes, not the stuff of summer tentpoles. And yet, these films succeed because they toe the line between sci-fi thrills and mournful seriousness. The premise of talking apes remains absurd, but the moral conundrums they encounter hold weight. When that balance is achieved, a film like Dawn—still the best of the rebooted franchise—emerges.Kingdom is less effective at striking that balance. The film follows a set of new ape characters led by the youthful Noa (Owen Teague), and it runs long, at nearly two and a half hours, with a rushed third act that returns to a spacefaring plot thread left hanging since Rise. William H. Macy, as a fatalistic human held captive by Proximus Caesar, is underused. And although the visual splendor of postapocalyptic Earth remains stunning and the motion-capture performances remarkably realistic, Proximus Caesar is a disappointingly shallow villain compared with what the franchise previously achieved in Koba.Still, Kingdom takes an admirably risky swing by examining the franchise’s ongoing, deeply pessimistic themes through the lens of a coming-of-age story. Noa is young—much younger than the Caesar seen in Dawn and War—and still idealistic. His beliefs have largely been untouched by humans, most of whom have deteriorated over generations of infected populations to become primitive and feral, and he grew up not knowing that Caesar existed. By the end of the film, he’s not setting out to start a new coalition of apes or to assert his dominance; he’s merely rebuilding his home. As such, Kingdom hints that Noa’s journey may look quite different from Caesar’s, even if he faces the same problems Caesar once did. Ideas evolve just as much as a species’ biology, the film suggests. And so too, it seems, can entire blockbuster franchises.
theatlantic.com
Bikini model reveals the detail about her marriage that made ‘the blood drain out’ of a woman’s face
“I just told a woman that I’m not having children and I kid you not, I saw the blood drain out of her face,” the 33-year-old began.
nypost.com
AP Condemns Israeli Government Cutting Its Live Feed of Gaza
AFP/Getty ImagesThe Associated Press brutally criticized the Israeli government on Tuesday after soldiers with the Israeli Defense Forces seized a camera, equipment, and cut its live feed in southern Israel, citing a new censorship law.“The Associated Press decries in the strongest terms the actions of the Israeli government to shut down our longstanding live feed showing a view into Gaza and seize AP equipment,” Lauren Easton, the wire's chief communications officer, said in a statement. “The shutdown was not based on the content of the feed but rather an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country’s new foreign broadcaster law.”The law, passed last month, allows Israel to shut down any foreign news outlet it believes to be a security risk. It was widely viewed as an effort to shut down the Israel operations of Qatar-based Al Jazeera, which an Israeli minister described as “acting from within against us.” The Israel government eventually shut down Al Jazeera in the country on May 5.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
‘A new low’: Biden admin eviscerated for response to 'butcher of Tehran' Raisi's death
Top House Republicans are coming down hard against the Biden State Department for expressing condolences in the death of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.
foxnews.com
Case Against Donald Trump Is 'Absurd'—Law Professor
A conviction in the hush money trial likely would be overturned on appeal, a New York law professor said.
newsweek.com
Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model explains how magazine made her feel comfortable stripping down
Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model Robyn Lawley appreciates that the brand is inclusive of different body types and celebrates stretch marks and cellulite.
foxnews.com
Two high school boys die after jumping from bridge in online dare, with one leaping in to save his friend
Rayan Alnasser, 16, and Zakaria Chaar, 15, drowned after jumping off a South Carolina bridge in an online dare, with one leaping in to try to save his friend who "immediately went into distress" on hitting the water, authorities said.
nypost.com
‘Furiosa’ expands the mythic power of the Mad Max universe
An epic prequel starring Anya Taylor-Joy shifts the Mad Max franchise into a whole other gear.
washingtonpost.com
What’s the funniest headline you’ve ever seen? I’m taking your jokes.
Alexandra’s live chat with readers starts at 11 a.m. ET on Tuesday. Submit your questions now.
washingtonpost.com
Food fight! Wendy’s takes on McDonald’s with new $3 breakfast value meal
Wendy's declared war on McDonald's discount meals by offering a new breakfast value meal as the fast food giants battle to lure back customers hit hard by inflation.
nypost.com
Kremlin TV Drops ‘New’ Tucker Carlson Show
smotrim.ruThe Kremlin propaganda machine has made Tucker Carlson its newest star television host, whether he likes it or not.The former Fox News host has gotten his own show on the state-run channel Rossiya 24—except it’s not quite as new as the channel would have people believe. The program, called “Tucker. Rossiya 24,” treats viewers to days-old episodes of Carlson’s own show posted on X and YouTube, but with a Russian voiceover.An episode was aired Monday night, for example, featuring Carlson discussing conspiracy theories about Lyme disease being used as a bioweapon under the title “ticks–nuclear weapons for the poor.” The same episode, minus the Russian voiceover, was available to American social media users on May 10.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Student Loan Update: Biden Challenged Over Cost to Taxpayers
Republican lawmakers said a Biden administration move to waive $147 billion of student loan debt would be too costly for taxpayers.
newsweek.com
Jonathan Bailey Is Playing Anthony With Unhinged Levels of Horniness for Kate in ‘Bridgerton’ Season 3 — and I Love It
Bailey told Decider all the way back in 2020 this is what he always wanted for Anthony!
nypost.com