What happened to Spencer Elden, you ask? He became a news sensation when CNN and Time interviewed him about the album cover. Kurt Cobain was long gone and Dave Grohl started the present top rock band, Foo Fighters. Years passed and Nirvana's artists had started pursuing different career options. For them, it was just another freelance job, and after the shoot, they went on to have tacos.Įlden, now 28, and his parents never thought that their freelance gig could one day become the album of the decade, selling over 30 million copies globally, making $50 million. The shoot happened in the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center in Pasadena, where Rick, a lifeguard, blew on his infant's face, dunking him in the pool. The entire shoot lasted for about a couple of minutes and Elden and his parents were paid only $200. 2022.Related: 20 Surprising Facts About Frances Bean, Kurt Cobain’s Daughter “Nirvana Attorneys Seek Dismissal of ‘Nevermind’ ‘Child Porn’ Lawsuit, Calling It Too Late and Too ‘Absurd.’” Variety, 23 Dec. “A Lawsuit over Nirvana’s ‘Nevermind’ Baby Album Cover Has Been Dismissed.” NPR, 4 Jan. “Nirvana’s Nevermind Cover Art Lawsuit Dismissed.” BBC News, 4 Jan. “Nirvana Sued by Man Who Was Baby on ‘Nevermind’ Album Cover.” Snopes.Com. “Nirvana Baby Refiles Lawsuit over Nevermind Album Cover.” BBC News, 14 Jan. This, Elden’s lawyers argued, demonstrated that the band and the record company deliberately wanted to show the baby’s penis and use the image for commercial gain. 13, Elden filed a new version of his lawsuit, which included a declaration from the album graphic designer where he told the band that the genitalia could be digitally removed from the photograph. We covered Elden’s lawsuit in more detail back in August 2021. We are confident that Spencer will be allowed to move forward with the case.” Nevermind Baby Lawsuit refers to a lawsuit put forth by Spencer Elden, the baby featured on the cover of the Nirvana album Nevermind, suing Nirvana and. Marsh Law responded by saying, “In accordance with the court’s order we will be filing a Second Amended Complaint very soon.
If the defendants filed another motion to dismiss, both the teams would meet on Jan. 13, 2022, to refile the case with appropriate changes. Olguin said that Elden’s team had until Jan. Olguin of the Central District Court in California. 30, 2021, to respond to the motion for dismissal, but missed the deadline, so the case was dismissed by Judge Fernando M. This is common for all of our clients who are victims of actively traded child pornography, regardless of how long ago the image was created.”Įlden’s team had until Dec. Nirvana’s lawyers also said that the statute of limitations on Elden’s claims expired in 2011, to which Elden’s legal team from Marsh Law said, “Any distribution of or profits earned from any sexually explicit image of a child not only creates longstanding liability but it also breeds lifelong trauma. They noted that anyone who owned a copy of the record would “on Elden’s theory guilty of felony possession of child pornography.” They added that until recently, Elden enjoyed being known as the “Nirvana baby” by reenacting the photograph many times in exchange for a fee, tattooing the album name across his chest, autographing album covers and posting them for sale on eBay, and trying to pick up women using that connection. “Elden’s claim that the photograph on the Nevermind album cover is ‘child pornography’ is, on its face, not serious,” their lawyers said. The former band members responded with a motion to dismiss the suit last month. The case was dismissed because the plaintiff missed the deadline for responding to the motion for dismissal.Įlden, who is now 30 years old, asked for $150,000 from each defendant, including surviving band members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic, Kurt Cobain’s estate, album photographer Kurt Weddle, Cobain’s former wife, Courtney Love, Universal Music, Geffen Records, Warner Records, and MCA Music.
Spencer Elden, the baby on the cover art, had filed the suit in 2021, claiming that the band exploited his image and profited from his naked body as a baby. A lawsuit accusing former Nirvana band members of child exploitation and pornography for using a naked baby as cover art on their 1991 “Nevermind” album has now been dismissed by a California court.