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Papa John’s Founder Admits He Dropped the N-Bomb. Update: Racist John now says he shouldn’t have quit

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/17/business/papa-johns-schnatter.html

Papa John’s Founder Will Not ‘Go Quietly’ as Company Tries to Push Him Away


Papa John’s just wants Papa John to go away.

The pizza chain has spent the past week distancing itself from John Schnatter, its founder and pitchman, after it was reported that he had used a racial slur in a comment about black people.

Mr. Schnatter apologized and resigned as chairman of the company last Wednesday. On Friday, the company said Mr. Schnatter’s image, a fixture on its marketing materials, would be removed as the “first of several key steps to rebuild trust from the inside-out.”

Then on Sunday, Papa John’s booted him from subleased office space at the corporate headquarters in Louisville, Ky., and asked him to stop speaking to the media.

But Mr. Schnatter, who opened the first Papa John’s restaurant in 1985, isn’t going to make things easy. Both he and his lawyer sent letters to the board over the weekend suggesting that he was pressured to resign without any investigation into the circumstances, which he said included an extortion attempt. Relinquishing the position, he wrote, “was a mistake.”

“John is not going to go quietly into the night and watch the company he worked so hard to build fall off a cliff
,” said Mr. Schnatter’s lawyer, Patricia Glaser, who has been hired in the past to handle contract disputes by clients including Keith Olbermann and Harvey Weinstein. “He is going to protect shareholders and the company as much as he can.”

Ms. Glaser said that the Papa John’s board should conduct an investigation into the claims that led to Mr. Schnatter’s removal as chairman. She has sent a letter to the board saying that members cannot remove him as a director without a shareholder vote.

For decades, Mr. Schnatter has loomed large over Papa John’s, his personality bound tightly to the chain’s business strategy as he expanded the company into a chain with more than 5,000 locations around the world, appearing in its television ads and even on the boxes its pizza is delivered in.

With a market value of more than $1.7 billion, Papa John’s is now the fourth-largest pizza chain in the country, behind Domino’s, Pizza Hut and Little Caesars, according to the restaurant market research firm Technomic.

But Mr. Schnatter, who also owns nearly 30 percent of Papa John’s stock, has drawn an outsize amount of criticism in a short amount of time.

Last fall, he complained that the National Football League had hurt Papa John’s sales by failing to handle football players who protested racism and police brutality by kneeling during the national anthem.

The comments were praised by white supremacists but denounced by many consumers and investors. Mr. Schnatter stepped down as chief executive. Papa John’s gave up a longtime sponsorship deal with the N.F.L. and was promptly replaced by Pizza Hut.


The latest furor stems from a May 22 conference call with Laundry Service, a marketing agency, that was intended to prepare him for future questions about diversity.

During the call, he was confronted about the N.F.L. uproar and asked whether he was racist, Mr. Schnatter wrote in a letter to the Papa John’s board that was reviewed by The New York Times. He denied the assertion and then, Mr. Schnatter wrote, he said Col. Harland Sanders, who founded the Kentucky Fried Chicken fast-food chain and was its longtime spokesman, used the racial slur to describe black people. Colonel Sanders died in 1980.

But Mr. Schnatter said he would never use that word.

“Let me be very clear: I never used the ‘N’ word in that meeting as a racial epithet, nor would I ever,” he wrote.

The day after the call, Papa John’s decided to fire Laundry Service, Mr. Schnatter wrote. The pizza company owed $1.3 million for the marketing firm’s services, but Laundry Service said that some of its employees had been offended by Mr. Schnatter’s comments on the call and demanded $6 million, with one of its lawyers threatening to conduct “a smear campaign,” Mr. Schnatter wrote. Papa John’s offered to pay $2.5 million, he wrote.

Laundry Service declined to comment, but in an internal memo reviewed by The Times, the company said on Tuesday that “disparaging and outrageous comments” made in news reports about the company and Wasserman, the talent management company that owns it, “are completely false.”

Laundry Service said in the memo that it was planning an on-the-record response disputing the comments and asked employees to refrain from speaking to journalists.

Papa John’s did not respond to a request for comment.

Board members who suggested that he also give up his board seat “were acting on rumor and innuendo,” Mr. Schnatter wrote, adding that Papa John’s “has demonstrated that it does not know how to handle a crisis based on misinformation.”

“I will not allow either my good name or the good name of the company I founded and love to be unfairly tainted,” he wrote.

Last week, when a report about the call appeared in Forbes, Mr. Schnatter issued a statement apologizing “regardless of the context.” He also resigned from the board of trustees for the University of Louisville.

Since then, Major League Baseball has suspended a promotion arrangement with Papa John’s. The mayor of Jeffersonville, Ind., Mr. Schnatter’s hometown, stripped a local gym of his name. The New York Yankees and the Oregon State University athletics department cut ties with the company.


Papa John’s has said that it will commission an independent audit of its diversity policies and culture and also send its senior management team to stores around the country to hear employees’ concerns.

Still, its best course of action may just be to wait things out, in a political environment with “so much rhetoric and hostility in the air” and confusion caused by differing accounts of the Laundry Service call, said Mark A. Cohen, a former chief executive of several retail companies who teaches business at Columbia University.

“To a super majority of the customers of this brand, what just occurred is meaningless,” said Mr. Cohen. “The consumer has an extremely short attention span.”

Papa John’s now faces the tricky task of disentangling itself from its founder and convincing its customers and investors to move on. The company may need to rebrand itself — a process that is “not fast and not cheap,” said John Danner, a lecturer at the business school of the University of California, Berkeley.

“In the short term, it is all about survival and damage control,” he said. “And if you’re going to make a commitment to atone, it had better be genuine and you had better be able to stick to it, because you’re only going to have one bite of the apple
.”
 
Kinda hard to not worry about people that fuckin hate us, do shit on the daily that directly affects us, our livelihoods, our wellbeing and do things that actively stands as a detriment to "what's best for us"..

but you can go ahead and keep with that narrative of us being "obsessed with white people"... Like we are the ones killing them... calling the police on them for nothing... making life more difficult for them..

Have at it.. just dont act surprised when folks look at you suspect or question you for wanting to give them the benefit of the doubt and talkin bout some tolerance. They sure dont give it to us...
This was HOT.
 
I stand by this being an example of people being offended by everything. Again, if you're just going to ignore context and be offended by the use of the word no matter what, that's some petty shit to me. Whether they say nigger or N word, you know what they are talking about so what fucking difference does it make? As long as they aren't using the word to attack or disparage black people or to claim some general familiarity with blacks that isn't granted to whites, why would you be offended by simply hearing the word?

I'm not giving him the benefit of the doubt anywhere. His use of the word is innocuous by definition, period. He did not use it to attack anyone. He did not use it with any blatant maliciousness. You can try to play your Professor X games and guess what he meant if that's what makes you happy, but that's just your speculation and not the facts of what happened.

We all agree he's a racist. We all agree that the general sentiment of these responses were racist, or at the very least, insensitive. I'll just leave it there.

He took a liberty in using that phrasing and it is that very same comfort and overconfidence that makes his overall views look doubly questionable.
 
he gonna try to make a competitor pizza company and come back up like famous amos..
that mfs out here selling cookies again, tryna push em at costco
 
Should have fell back after the NFL shit backfired, but dude seems to be on a mission to get himself the fuck outta here
 
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...s-will-continue-relationship-with-papa-johns/

Jerry Jones says Cowboys will continue relationship with Papa John’s


Several sports teams, including the Falcons, have distanced themselves from Papa John’s after it was revealed founder John Schnatter used a racial slur in a May conference call.

But Cowboys owner Jerry Jones won’t follow suit. That’s because he owns a percentage of 50 Papa John’s stores in North Texas, according to Stephen Jones.

“Some teams that I’ve noticed that have addressed the Papa John’s issue by distancing themselves do not have the same relationship that the Cowboys have with the Papa John’s business in Texas,” Jerry Jones said Wednesday. “We own the Papa John’s in Texas and feel strongly that our Cowboys are the face of Papa John’s, and that judgment is warranted by what we’ve done over the last 15 years with Papa John’s. That’s very unfortunate. . . . It’s unfortunate for the company and unfortunate for John. I’m sure if he could do it over again, he’d like do-overs. But the bottom line is the Cowboys and our relationship, we own those stores. It’s not an endorsements. Similar to the way [John] Elway does in Denver.

“The point is: We just want to work real hard. We literally have thousands of people who work in those stores and several thousand customers who want to have the kind of taste in your mouth that you want to have when you have Papa John’s to use a phrase.”

Jones, who last fall called Schnatter “a great American,” said he has not talked to the ousted CEO since Schnatter’s use of a racial slur was revealed. Jones said the Cowboys’ direct ownership with Papa John’s should serve the company well in rebounding in the Texas market.

“When we became involved, Papa John’s wasn’t doing good, so when we became involved we deliberately make the Cowboys more the face of Papa John’s if you recall,” Jones said. “I would rap and break dance and do all that kind of stuff. We used to do that break dancing and the rapping and the phones would just light up all over the place on that. So ours is a little bit different. We’ve got a lot of our face out there.

“I regret that for John. But at the end of the day we’ve got too many people, too many customers . . . that we just need to do as good as we can do under the circumstances. Everybody knows certainly that there’s not bias here relative to the Dallas Cowboys, and so we feel comfortable in going ahead and taking care of our business.”

Smh...
 
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