In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your GunBroker.com account. Click the sign-in button at the top right of the forums page to get connected.

Nike/Colin

grumpygygrumpygy Member Posts: 48,464 ✭✭✭
edited September 2018 in General Discussion
quote:After Phil Knight first launched the Nike brand in 1971, he claimed that he could persuade the whole world to buy his shoes if he could first get them on the feet of ?five cool guys.? In truth, it took only two cool guys to transform Nike into what Knight would later call a ?total brand?: the Oregon distance runner Steve Prefontaine, whose spectacular rise and early death rooted his legend, and his unrealized potential, firmly in the soil of Nike?s origin story; and Michael Jordan, who reintroduced the brand to millions of Americans a decade after Pre?s death, saving the shoe company from irrelevance at the tail end of the jogging boom.

?What Phil and Nike have done,? Jordan said, ?is turn me into a dream.?

The dream business was immensely profitable for Nike: Just a few years after Jordan?s first Nike commercial aired in 1985, the company surpassed a billion dollars in annual sales; a short while later, in 1988, Dan Wieden, of the Portland advertising firm Wieden + Kennedy, gave Nike its most enduring slogan: ?Just Do It.? On Monday afternoon, in anticipation of that slogan?s 30th anniversary, Nike announced the former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick as the new face of the ?Just Do It? campaign.

It?s significant that an institution as powerful as Nike has thrown its weight behind Kaepernick and his crusade against racial injustice, which began when he started kneeling during the national anthem?a move that has put him at odds with the NFL, and which has almost certainly kept football teams from employing him. But Nike has often been on the wrong side of social-justice movements, and in the past used its considerable power and influence to crush any protest movement that undermined the company?s bottom line.

Throughout the 1980s and ?90s, underage workers toiled in Indonesian factories producing Nike shoes; at factories in China, workers claimed they were coerced into putting in excessive overtime in order to meet Nike?s demanding production schedule; and in Vietnamese factories, workers faced dangerous conditions later documented by independent auditors from Ernst & Young. In the summer of 1997, when Nguyen Thi Thu Phuong died while making a pair of Nike shoes at a factory in Vietnam, the company?s response was to boldly claim: ?We don?t make shoes.? This was a shockingly disingenuous statement from a company whose founder would later call his memoir Shoe Dog.

While reporting a book about Nike, I learned that during the spring of 2000, Knight sought to crush a growing campus-protest movement against sweatshop labor by quashing lucrative equipment and apparel deals with the University of Oregon and the University of Michigan. Behind closed doors, the billionaire resorted to more personal means of retribution, including withholding donations from a nonprofit organization run by the University of Oregon president, Dave Frohnmayer. When Nike did at last make concessions to labor unions at some of the factories making its shoes, it was only because of sustained efforts from labor and human-rights organizations, such as the Worker Rights Consortium. In the wake of this defeat, after years of ignoring or denying accusations that it had relied on sweatshop labor, Nike learned how to market itself as a good corporation with noble intentions, which were stymied only by its na?vet?. It was a company trapped by its own humble beginnings, unaware of the immense power it had accrued, according to a May 2001 statement issued by Nike?s corporate and social responsibility manager, Harsh Saini.

?We were a bunch of shoe geeks who expanded so much without thinking of being socially responsible that we went from being a very sexy brand name to suddenly becoming the poster boy for everything bad in manufacturing,? Saini said.

Why Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised Colin Kaepernick

Kaepernick?s ?Just Do It? ad, which bears the slogan ?Believe in Something. Even if it means sacrificing everything,? seems, on its face, to be more politically divisive than any campaign in Nike?s history?praised from the left for giving Kaepernick a platform to continue speaking out against police brutality and racial injustice, and vilified from the right by the likes of Sean Hannity, who remains determined to cast Kaepernick as unpatriotic and disrespectful. In reality, however, Nike?s standing with Kaepernick has nothing to do with politics and everything to do with the fact that he has transformed himself into an icon. For Nike, Kaepernick?s cause is simply good business?if it were anything other than a cynical branding exercise, the company would surely not be simultaneously doing business with the NFL, which has done its best to stifle Kaepernick?s protest movement.

One of capitalism?s most enduring myths is the idea that there are good corporations and bad corporations. The truth is far more simple: Colin Kaepernick has a dream, and selling dreams is Nike?s business.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/colin-kaepernick-nike-and-the-myth-of-good-and-bad-companies/ar-BBMUSuQ?li=BBnbfcN


Bull

Comments

  • roswellnativeroswellnative Member Posts: 10,195 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    i will dream of other brands
    Although always described as a cowboy, Roswellnative generally acts as a righter of wrongs or bodyguard of some sort, where he excels thanks to his resourcefulness and incredible gun prowesses.
  • yoshmysteryoshmyster Member Posts: 22,072 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    If they believe in this "dream" they would've been better off getting MLK as the pitchman.
  • wifetrainedwifetrained Member Posts: 1,229 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I have never owned a Nike product and certainly see no reason to start now. Nike can go to hell and Crapernick can go with them.
  • spasmcreekspasmcreek Member Posts: 37,717 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    SCREW the rich ingrate....and the company that is trying to immortalize him and their bottom line....
  • 4205raymond4205raymond Member Posts: 3,431 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Cancelled my First National Bank of Omaha Card about two months ago. Wrote a letter to Dicks. "Will never darken their door step again."

    All done with Nike. Realize their marketing folks are pretty sharp, but I have a dream too and I am willing to wait and see if my decision and like minded folks will make a difference.
  • SW0320SW0320 Member Posts: 2,548 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Just heard Tiger Woods endorsed the ad. He called it a beautiful ad.
  • droptopdroptop Member Posts: 8,363 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Just when you think you've heard the last of Kaepernick, NIKE brings him back from the dead.

    Colin Kaepernick Tweets Thanks to Dolphins Players Who Took a Knee During Anthem

    ?My Brothers @kstills and @ithinkisee12 continue to show their unwavering strength by fighting for the oppressed!,? Kaepernick tweeted. ?They have not backed down, even when attacked and intimidated. Their courage will move the world forward!

    https://www.breitbart.com/sports/2018/09/09/colin-kaepernick-tweets-thanks-to-dolphins-players-who-took-a-knee-during-anthem/
  • wifetrainedwifetrained Member Posts: 1,229 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Perhaps I'm too old, maybe someone can inform me just what was sooooo courageous about taking a knee at a sporting event knowing full well nothing is going to happen to you in response. And just who exactly is being "oppressed"?
  • Bottom GunBottom Gun Member Posts: 232 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    These courageous, oppressed millionaires should be thankful they are in the NFL because many would be doing hard time in the joint if the NFL hadn?t stepped in and bailed them out of their jam after they committed crimes. Of course if you or I committed the same offenses, we would still be in the joint. . . . . . . . .

    I wonder why successful businesses feel the need to shoot themselves in the foot by making foolish political statements? Don?t they realize they will alienate and lose business from a certain faction regardless how small it may be? Does the CEO wake up one morning and think to himself, ?My business is very successful, what can I do the change that??

    So long as they insist upon drawing a line in the sand for no apparent reason, I?ll be on the opposite side of that line. If they want to throw down the gauntlet, I?ll pick it up.
    Mechanical engineers have their moments.
  • droptopdroptop Member Posts: 8,363 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Mark Dice should do a "man on the street" question asking why / what are the football players protesting.

    First he should ask if THEY know football players are "taking a knee".

    Millennials: The Dumbest Generation in History?
    Questioned about the War of Northern Aggression .
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oHwaSs0HsE
  • discusdaddiscusdad Member Posts: 11,427 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    rumor has it, that TurboTax has hired Rev. Al Sharpton to be the face and inspiration of the company.
  • mnrivrat48mnrivrat48 Member Posts: 1,707 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    If you want to be an activist, then be an activist.

    If you want to be a player in professional sports, then be a player.

    If you want to disrespect the American flag, then you are the south end of a north bound * . My 2 cents
  • spasmcreekspasmcreek Member Posts: 37,717 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    it is done because to many customers are to stupid to realize and appreciate the country they live in....puddy woods..another self absorbed nigerian
  • spasmcreekspasmcreek Member Posts: 37,717 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    well rev sharpton must be a sharp one...the irs and federal govt gives him a pass on millions in taxes...why can't we get that PERK ???
  • TfloggerTflogger Member Posts: 3,399 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I've never been into watching a bunch of adults dressed in funny costumes contesting the ownership of an inflatable toy.
  • slingerslinger Member Posts: 1,465 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by SW0320
    Just heard Tiger Woods endorsed the ad. He called it a beautiful ad.


    Same taste in hookers vs. Elin[:(]
  • sxsnufsxsnuf Member Posts: 2,952 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Friend sent me a little something he saw on a reader board in front of a local trucking company,

    "I TOOK MY NIKES BACK BECAUSE THEY HURT MY FEET WHEN I STOOD FOR THE NATIONAL ANTHEM"
    Arrivederci gigi
Sign In or Register to comment.