Eric Cramer on Antitrust, Fighter Pay, and Using the Law to Drive Social Change
In this episode of Raising the Bar with RebuttalPR, host Ray DeLorenzi sits down with Eric Cramer, chairman of Berger Montague and co-chair of its antitrust department, whose career spans more than three decades of plaintiff-side class action work and more than $4 billion in recoveries for workers, consumers, fighters, and others harmed by concentrated corporate power.
Eric traces his path from Woodstock to Princeton and Harvard Law School, where he sidestepped big-law recruiting in favor of environmental public interest work. He shares how a chance meeting brought him to Philadelphia, how a small generalist firm threw him into depositions and appellate arguments from day one, and how a 1995 conversation with Berger Montague's founding partner set the course for his career.
The conversation moves into Eric's early work on nuclear weapons facility cases, including communities around Rocky Flats and Hanford and prisoners at Oregon State Penitentiary who were irradiated in Cold War experiments. He explains how those cases taught him to translate complex science and economics for judges and juries, a skill that carried directly into antitrust work and a deep facility for econometrics and economic proof.
Eric then walks through the UFC fighter pay antitrust case: how the UFC used exclusive long-term contracts to lock fighters out of competing organizations, suppress pay to well below 20 percent of sport revenues, and monopolize the market for elite MMA. He covers the economic proof, the media dynamics of litigating against a powerful sports entity, and the resulting settlement for the fighter class.
The episode closes with Eric's take on the state of antitrust enforcement, why the field is having a moment across the political spectrum, and his work with Public Justice and the American Antitrust Institute.