Papa John founder John Schnatter kicked out of his office, explains why he called blacks ******* UPDATE: He Back Tour

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Papa John's founder John Schnatter kicked out of his office


Papa John's founder is physically out at the pizza chain.

A special committee of the board of directors met on Sunday to discuss its founder John Schnatter, who resigned his chairmanship last week after making racist comments. The board decided to kick him out of his office at Papa John's headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky.

Papa John's (PZZA) also announced that Schnatter will "cease all media appearances, and not make any further statements to the media regarding the company, its business or employees," the company said in a statement. Papa John's announced Friday it would remove Schnatter's image from its marketing materials.

The committee said it will oversee an outside auditor's investigation into Papa John's culture, including the company's existing processes, policies and systems related to diversity and inclusion.

Related: How do you rebrand Papa John's when the problem is Papa John?

Schnatter remains on the board and still owns 30% of the company's shares.

Last week, Schnatter stepped down after it was revealed he used N-word on a conference call with its ad agency, Laundry Service, in May. On Saturday, Schnatter told CNN affiliate WLKY-TV in Louisville that the ad agency extorted him.
 
Papa John’s Founder Says Resignation Was a Mistake
John Schnatter accuses board of asking him to step down as chairman ‘without apparently doing any investigation’ into his use of a racial slur

Papa John’s founder John Schnatter, here with a pizza box bearing his likeness at the American Music Awards in 2011, resigned as chairman of the company last week, after stepping down as CEO in December.
Papa John’s founder John Schnatter, here with a pizza box bearing his likeness at the American Music Awards in 2011, resigned as chairman of the company last week, after stepping down as CEO in December. PHOTO: JAVIER ROJAS/PI/ZUMA PRESS
By Julie Jargon
Updated July 17, 2018 12:00 p.m. ET
275 COMMENTS
Papa John’s International Inc.’s PZZA -0.51% founder said “it was a mistake” to step down as chairman and is questioning how the company’s board investigated his use of a racial slur.

John Schnatter resigned last week after publicly apologizing for using the slur during media training with a marketing agency. Days later, in a letter to the directors reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, he accused the board of failing to do due diligence on the matter.

“The board asked me to step down as chairman without apparently doing any investigation. I agreed, though today I believe it was a mistake to do so,” Mr. Schnatter said in the letter, dated Saturday. “I will not allow either my good name or the good name of the company I founded and love to be unfairly tainted.”

Papa John’s declined to comment Monday, but the company has continued to distance itself from its founder. Mr. Schnatter is no longer allowed to use office space at corporate headquarters in Louisville, Ky., and the company said he will no longer be in any advertising or marketing materials.


Mr. Schnatter frequently appeared in ads, and his image long adorned the pizza boxes. He remains a board member and, according to regulatory filings, as of March owned 29% of Papa John’s shares, currently worth about $500 million.

In his letter to the board, Mr. Schnatter said he was asked during the media training whether he is racist, and answered “no.”

“I then said something on the order of, Colonel Sanders used the word ‘N,’ (I actually used the word), that I would never use that word, and Papa John’s doesn’t use that word,” he said in his letter.

Mr. Schnatter, who founded Papa John’s in 1984, had drawn criticism before, including in 2012 when he said that providing health insurance to employees under the Affordable Care Act would result in costlier pizza, and last November when he blamed a sales slide on declining TV football viewership and the National Football Leagues’s handling of the players’ national-anthem protests. Papa John’s was the official pizza of the NFL.

Mr. Schnatter stepped down as chief executive in December.

The company has struggled recently, posting a 4.9% decline in total revenue in the first quarter.

Last Wednesday, the board discussed Mr. Schnatter’s resigning from the board altogether, but he resisted, according to a person familiar with the matter. Instead, he offered to resign as chairman but remain on the board, and the board accepted. The pizza chain’s stock rose more than 12% following the news.

A different person familiar with the matter said the board only discussed Mr. Schnatter stepping down as chairman at the Wednesday meeting.

The board’s lead independent director, Olivia Kirtley, sent Mr. Schnatter a letter saying the board wished to discuss his full board resignation at a meeting scheduled for Sunday night, both people familiar with the matter said. Ms. Kirtley couldn’t be reached for comment. That letter prompted Mr. Schnatter’s letter.

“I am confident that an examination of the facts will bear out what I have written in this letter and show that once again our company has demonstrated that it does not know how to handle a crisis based on misinformation,” he wrote in his letter.

Mr. Schnatter hired Los Angeles trial attorney Patricia Glaser, who sent another letter to the board requesting it form a special committee to review the facts. One of the people familiar with the matter said Ms. Glaser simply asked the board to investigate the situation and that the formation of a special committee was already underway.


The company could face new hurdles if it tries to sever its ties with Mr. Schnatter, according to Ms. Glaser. “He’s not going quietly,” she said.

Write to Julie Jargon at julie.jargon@wsj.com

https://www.wsj.com/articles/papa-johns-founder-says-resignation-was-a-mistake-1531805367
 
Papa John's founder John Schnatter


It's now clear why Papa John's board of directors asked former Chairman John Schnatter to stop talking to the press.

Schnatter, in an interview Friday with a Louisville, Kentucky, CBS station, accused media agency Laundry Service of trying to blackmail Papa John's for $6 million to keep quiet about a May conference call in which the founder admitted he used the N-word. He also told the TV station that he was provoked into using that language and accused officials who removed his name from a gym of "cracking."

Schnatter told Kentucky CBS affiliate WLKY that an executive at Laundry Service threatened Papa John's that "if I don't get my F-ing money, I'm going to bury the founder." The Louisville-based pizza chain issued a press release at 11:46 p.m. Sunday, saying Schnatter was prohibited from talking to the press or making "any further statements to the media regarding the company, its business or employees."


The board of directors also said they decided to remove him from Papa John's advertising materials and revoke his office space at the company's headquarters. Schnatter was removed as chairman of the board last week after Forbes reported his comments on the call.



Papa John's founder: I was blackmailed 22 Hours Ago | 02:14

"They tried to extort us and we held firm and they took what I said and ran to Forbes and Forbes printed it and it went viral," Schnatter said.

The conference call in May came to light after Forbes magazine detailed the incident in an article Wednesday. The report, which was later confirmed by Schnatter, said he was on a call with Laundry Service when he tried to downplay comments he made about the National Football League last fall by saying, “Colonel Sanders called blacks n-----s" and never faced any public backlash at KFC.

While he again apologized for using the racially charged slur, Schnatter told the TV station he was baited into using that language.

"I was just repeating what somebody else said. I was actually kind of provoked," he said of what was supposed to be a confidential media training session. "They were promoting that kind of vocabulary, and they kept hitting it and I was like no, we're not going to do that ... that's not what we're about."

Schnatter said the other party on the call, which he didn't identify, repeatedly used the word. "By the fourth or fifth pass, I just said, 'No, we're not gonna be part of any such thing. So-and-so used the N-word, and we don't use the N-word, and we're not gonna use the N-word. And that's it,'" he said.

“You do not want to give Jeff Bezos a seven-year head start.”
Hear what else Buffett has to say


Neither Laundry Service nor Papa John's immediately responded to CNBC's request for comment.

"It's ironic. The very thing we were trying to avoid was the very thing that happened," he told WLKY.

Schnatter stepped down last week as chairman of Papa John's as well as from the board of trustees of the University of Louisville. The company's name was also removed from the University of Louisville's football stadium and his name was stripped from a signpost of a gymnasium in his hometown of Jeffersonville, Indiana, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal.

He also said Jeffersonville Mayor Mike Moore, who removed Schnatter's name from the gym, "overreacted."

"Everybody’s upset and they’re cracking. And they're just, they’re scared," he said. "You know Forbes is going to lie and you know the Courier’s going to lie. But you would think there would be something solid in these leaders to really acknowledge and to embrace what really went down.

In addition, Major League Baseball indefinitely suspended its Papa Slam promotion — a campaign that both sides have collaborated on since 2016 and a number of sports teams have distanced themselves from the brand.

Shares of Papa John's were down 3.9 percent in late trading Monday
 
Papa John’s founder said it was “a mistake” to resign after he used the n-word
He doesn’t seem very sorry for what he did.
By German Lopez@germanrlopezgerman.lopez@vox.com Jul 17, 2018, 1:10pm EDTSHARE
466110211.jpg.0.jpg

John Schnatter, founder of Papa John’s, in New York City.
Rob Kim/Getty Images
It seemed like a reasonable consequence: After using the n-word during a conference call in part about racial sensitivity, John “Papa John” Schnatter was forced to step down as board chair of the pizza chain. But a new report from Julie Jargon at the Wall Street Journalsuggests that Schnatter doesn’t think that he should have left his job last week.

The Wall Street Journal reviewed a letter to the directors in which Schnatter questioned the board’s request for him to resign. “The board asked me to step down as chairman without apparently doing any investigation. I agreed, though today I believe it was a mistake to do so,” he said. “I will not allow either my good name or the good name of the company I founded and love to be unfairly tainted.”

In his letter, Schnatter admitted to using the n-word. As he put it, he was asked if he was racist, and he said “no,” adding, “I then said something on the order of, Colonel Sanders used the word ‘N,’ (I actually used the word), that I would never use that word, and Papa John’s doesn’t use that word.” (As Barry Petchesky at Deadspin pointed out, it’s not clear why Schnatter is convinced that Colonel Sanders, of KFC fame, used the n-word; there’s no good evidence for it.)

The Papa John’s board, for its part, doesn’t seem convinced. They have now barred Schnatter from using office space at the pizza chain’s corporate headquarters, have told him to no longer make media appearances for Papa John’s, and plan to remove him from the company’s products.

This isn’t the first racial controversy for Schnatter; he had already resigned as Papa John’s CEO, but not chair, last year after blaming falling sales on the NFL’s inability to stop national anthem protests over systemic racism and police brutality. (Papa John’s was, but no longer is,the NFL’s official pizza.)

But Schnatter doesn’t seem very sorry for all of this, arguing that his resignation as board chair was “a mistake” and that his “good name” may be “unfairly tainted.” This offers a good opportunity, then, to explain why Schnatter’s use of the n-word was so bad.

Why white people shouldn’t use the n-word
The best explanation on this topic comes from Ta-Nehisi Coates, a writer at the Atlantic and author, most recently, of We Were Eight Years in Power. During an event last year, Coates was asked why white people shouldn’t use the n-word.



Coates first pointed out that it is normal in our culture for some people or groups to use certain words that others can’t. For example, his wife calls him “honey”; it would not be acceptable, he said, for strange women to do the same. Similarly, his dad was known by his family back home as Billy — but it would be awkward for Coates to try to use that nickname for his father.

“That’s because the relationship between myself and my dad is not the same as the relationship between my dad and his mother and his sisters who he grew up with,” Coates said. “We understand that.”

The same concept applies to different groups and their words. “My wife, with her girl friend, will use the word ‘bitch,’” Coates said. “I do not join in. You know what I’m saying? I don’t do that. I don’t do that. And perhaps more importantly, I don’t have a desire to do it.”

Coates pointed to another example — of a white friend who used to have a cabin in upstate New York that he called “the white trash cabin.” “I would never refer to that cabin” in that way, Coates said. “I would never tell him, ‘I’m coming to your white trash cabin.’”

Coates added, “The question one must ask is why so many white people have difficulty extending things that are basic laws of how human beings interact to black people.”

He gave a potential answer: “When you’re white in this country, you’re taught that everything belongs to you. You think you have a right to everything. … You’re conditioned this way. It’s not because your hair is a texture or your skin is light. It’s the fact that the laws and the culture tell you this. You have a right to go where you want to go, do what you want to do, be however — and people just got to accommodate themselves to you.”

“So here comes this word that you feel like you invented,” Coates said. “And now somebody will tell you how to use the word that you invented. ‘Why can’t I use it? Everyone else gets to use it. You know what? That’s racism that I don’t get to use it. You know, that’s racist against me. You know, I have to inconvenience myself and hear this song and I can’t sing along. How come I can’t sing along?’”

Coates concluded that white people should use this sense as a lesson: “The experience of being a hip-hop fan and not being able to use the word ‘ni**er’ is actually very, very insightful. It will give you just a little peek into the world of what it means to be black. Because to be black is to walk through the world and watch people doing things that you cannot do, that you can’t join in and do. So I think there’s actually a lot to be learned from refraining.”

In short, not using the n-word is a basic show of restraint and respect — the kind of restraint and respect consistently demanded of black people in American society. That Schnatter couldn’t live up to even this bare minimum is a strong sign that he shouldn’t be representing a big pizza chain that’s trying to repair its image.

https://www.vox.com/identities/2018/7/17/17581558/papa-john-n-word-resignation
 
We all know he lyin but what would yall do if crakka told the truth....

I call you ******* because you are and I hate you mofokrs. ..

:lol::lol:
 
Peace,



Cacs feel empowered when they use that word, plain and simple. It reminds them of a different time. It feeds their soulless husks.


I agree but they pussy because they try and hide......I get so sick of all the fake remorse...


And then that's followed by victimhood...

Like that crakka called the brotha out his name in hiswrk truck..

Now he cryin his life ruined.

Whoa the fuck is me....
 
everytime I ride pass one of them places you may want to go take a shit in front of the door

I don’t even shit on the mutha I just keep my money from touching the place. Shit can be removed but fucking with their paper scares em
 
I don’t even shit on the mutha I just keep my money from touching the place. Shit can be removed but fucking with their paper scares em


Fucking with all their money scares them.. I wish more of them would show their true self.. Cause i wanna make the best decision possible where im spending my money.. .Ijs
 
I just saw a promo that was specific for Atlanta.

A bunch of black faces saying how PPJ's let us down but they want to make it right.

40% off that nasty pizza with betteratl as the promo code.

I hope they go out of business.

Keep in mind it's probably some Black owners of Papa John's franchises. It's not easy to get out of a Franchise and probably impossible now due to all the negative publicity. So you can't blame them for trying to keep their business afloat
 
If I ever see him walking around I will rip them chipmunk cheeks off his faggot ass face
 
Why should we accept an apology from a man who:
- Was OPENLY critical and hostile to the nation's 1st Black president and his policies.
- Refused to provide health care for his employees under the Affordable Health Care Act.
- Threatened to raise prices on his product as a result of AHCA.
- Sided with and agreed with the owners/management against Black players taking a knee during the anthem.
- Felt "compelled" to use the word "******" when addressing the corporate members of the company during a meeting.

Man, Fuck this guy.... :hmm:
 
Why should we accept an apology from a man who:
- Was OPENLY critical and hostile to the nation's 1st Black president and his policies.
- Refused to provide health care for his employees under the Affordable Health Care Act.
- Threatened to raise prices on his product as a result of AHCA.
- Sided with and agreed with the owners/management against Black players taking a knee during the anthem.
- Felt "compelled" to use the word "******" when addressing the corporate members of the company during a meeting.

Man, Fuck this guy.... :hmm:

^^^^^^
All this here.

These "apologies" are so predictable it ain't even funny. Every fucking racist alive who gets busted says I'm not a racist.

Double fuck this punk from INDIANA (the state that elected a KKK-backed governor).
 
^^^^^^
All this here.

These "apologies" are so predictable it ain't even funny. Every fucking racist alive who gets busted says I'm not a racist.

Double fuck this punk from INDIANA (the state that elected a KKK-backed governor).
ain't u from NYC?

yall have a history of fuckery since the 1800s
 
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