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book Law, Business and Society 11th Edition by Tony McAdams cover

Law, Business and Society 11th Edition by Tony McAdams

Edition 11ISBN: 978-0078023866
book Law, Business and Society 11th Edition by Tony McAdams cover

Law, Business and Society 11th Edition by Tony McAdams

Edition 11ISBN: 978-0078023866
Exercise 44
Timothy Egan in The New York Times commented on Nike's relationship with Pittsburg Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who was accused in 2010 of sexual assault on a 20-year-old woman:
Is there anything creepier than a big, beer-breathed celebrity athlete exposing himself in a night club and hitting on underage girls, all the while protected by an entourage of off-duty cops Well, yes. It's the big, corporate sponsor-Nike, in this case-that continues to sell product with the creep as their role model."
No criminal charges were filed in the case, but Roethlisberger was suspended by the National Football League for four games, and the owner of the company that marketed "Big Ben's Beef Jerky" reportedly ended his company's endorsement relationship with the quarterback. Roethlisberger had been accused of similar misconduct in other episodes.
Prior to Roethlisberger's appearance with the Steel­ers in the 2011 Super Bowl, Ward Headley, president of a Cincinnati-based sports marketing company, said the quarterback's endorsement future would be bright, despite past problems, if Pittsburg were to win the game:
To me, winning cures everything. Not just to me, but the reality is to corporate America and to people, winning is the answer.
The Green Bay Packers won that game, but Headley's judgment that winning nullifies past transgressions seems to be accurate. Should we condemn corporate America or the American people for being so willing to forgive winners' past wrongdoing Explain.
Explanation
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According to the market, it is very accu...

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Law, Business and Society 11th Edition by Tony McAdams
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