They’re telling you you’re out of the event, saying you “offended sponsors,” and using that as a reason to claim you broke your contract.
They’re also holding $15,000 over your head — money they already gave you for training — and saying they’ll only let you keep it if you sign a silence agreement.
That’s the “non-disparagement” part.
If you don’t sign, they’re threatening to sue you for the money back and possibly more (“punitive and consequential damages” means extra cash they’d try to claim to punish you or cover supposed losses).
They gave you two days to decide — which is deliberately high-pressure.
It’s meant to make you cave fast rather than talk to a lawyer or the public.
The subtext is:
“You embarrassed us, we want to cut ties fast, and we want to make sure you can’t say anything that makes us look bad afterward.”
It’s basically a “sign this gag order or we’ll make your life expensive” situation.
Emotionally, you can read this as them:
- trying to control the narrative,
- using legalese to intimidate and contain fallout,
- and leveraging the advance money to buy your silence.
“Cease and desist from making any further public or private statements…”
They’re ordering you to stop talking about the event, its organizers, or sponsors — whether online or privately.
If you post anything negative about them, they could claim it violates your confidentiality or non-disparagement clause and threaten legal action.
“Continuing to engage in such conduct will cause you to be liable for damages…”
This means they’re warning you:
if you keep saying things that they think hurt their reputation, they’ll try to sue you for money — claiming your words caused “damage” (like lost sponsorships or bad press).
They don’t specify an amount, which is part of the intimidation factor.
“Creator Clash is evaluating all courses of action… which have caused significant damages.”
They’re signaling that they’re considering suing you.
That could include demanding repayment of money or claiming financial losses due to your “actions and omissions.”
But “evaluating” means they haven’t filed anything yet — it’s a warning, not an active lawsuit.
“Advance of $15,000… to be refunded in full due to your material breach.”
They’re demanding you pay back the $15,000 they gave you for training — immediately.
They’re saying your alleged “breach” voids your right to keep it. However, this part ties directly to the next threat…
“Creator Clash will agree to release any claims… in consideration for your signing the non-disparagement agreement.”
This means: they’re offering you a deal — if you sign a gag order (non-disparagement agreement) by the deadline, they’ll drop their demand for the $15,000 and won’t pursue damages.
If you don’t sign, they threaten to:
“seek all remedies available at law and equity, including punitive and consequential damages.”
That means they could:
- File a lawsuit for breach of contract,
- Try to collect more than $15,000, arguing they lost sponsorship money or reputation,
- Ask for punitive damages (extra money meant to punish you),
- And potentially try to harm your public image through legal filings.
Deadline and tone
They gave a two-day deadline (March 27) to make you feel trapped — which is not standard in good-faith business dealings.
It’s a pressure tactic to make you sign before you can get legal counsel.
Realistic meaning
They’re not saying they’ve sued you — only that they could if you don’t cooperate.
Most of this is leverage, not an active case.
The real goal is to silence you quickly and prevent public discussion that could embarrass them or complicate their event.
“If you fail to sign by March 27, we’ll seek all remedies at law and equity… including punitive and consequential damages.”
This is their strongest-sounding threat, but also the least likely to hold up.
Legal meaning:
- “Punitive damages” = extra money meant to punish you (rare in contract cases).
- “Consequential damages” = indirect losses (like lost sponsorship money, image damage, etc.).
Courts almost never award punitive damages in contract breaches.
They’d have to prove you acted maliciously or fraudulently — an extremely high bar.