Updated at 1:45 p.m. Jan 24: Revised to reflect additional information from an NFL representative.

The NFL unveiled a public-service announcement Wednesday honoring the life of Botham Jean as part of a partnership with the Jean family’s foundation, according to the family’s lawyer.

The two-minute video shows the “human cost of police brutality” from the Jean family’s perspective, attorney Lee Merritt said.

He had said Wednesday that the PSA would be shown during the Super Bowl, but an NFL representative said Thursday that there were no plans to broadcast it during the game.

Jean, 26, was fatally shot in his own apartment in 2018 by former Dallas Officer Amber Guyger, who was convicted of murder last year and is serving a 10-year prison sentence.

The PSA featuring Jean’s family is one of several videos produced in partnership with the NFL to raise awareness on social media as part of its Inspire Change initiative, which aims to highlight social justice issues, according to an NFL representative.

The PSA featuring the Jeans is intended for social media. But Inspire Change will run a 60-second commercial during the Super Bowl featuring former NFL star Anquan Boldin, whose cousin Corey Jones was fatally shot by a police officer.

Merritt said the PSA featuring Jean, produced by Jay-Z’s company Roc Nation and the NFL, was a step in the right direction after the backlash Colin Kaepernick and other players faced when they protested police brutality on the field.

“Since then, the NFL has worked to see what they could do to try to right their wrongs,” Merritt said. “This isn’t the compromise that I was hoping for. I was hoping that the players would be released to resume their on-the-field protest.”

Jean’s relatives were at first reluctant to work with the NFL to create the video for those reasons, he said.

But they were ultimately pleased with how the PSA reflected Botham Jean’s life — and that it didn’t shy away from the fact that his life was unjustly cut short at the hands of a police officer, Merritt said.

The video opens on a photo of Botham Jean smiling alongside his mother, Allison Jean.

“Botham Jean is my son,” she says. “He is an active child. He is the light in any dark room.”

His sister, Allisa Findley, says her brother “is the kindest, sweetest person you could ever know.”

It’s intentional that they refer to Botham in the present tense, Merritt said.

“It’s important for them, for people to understand that although he was killed, his legacy lives on,” he said. “He continues to influence the world. … The impact that he made on people in his 26 years continues to have ripple effects today.”

In the video, Allison Jean says what happened to her son “should not happen to another family.”

“What I hope to see happening is that our black boys are not seen as a threat,” she says.

Merritt said Roc Nation has also contacted the families of O’Shae Terry, a black man who was fatally shot by an Arlington police officer days before Jean’s death, and Atatiana Jefferson, a black woman who was killed in her own home when a Fort Worth officer fired at her through a bedroom window, about creating similar PSA videos highlighting their lives.