Tag Archives: sports-business

LeBron James Compares NFL Owners To Slave Masters, Gets Flack For Sharing 21 Savage Lyrics

Source: Apega/WENN.com / WENN LeBron James is pretty much Teflon when it comes to controversies off the court, but a pair of recent instances have put him in the crosshairs of critics chomping at the bit. The Los Angeles Lakers superstar slammed NFL owners in a recent episode of his HBO show The Shop, and the sharing of a questionable 21 Savage lyric had him later apologizing for the act. Deadline reports : Speaking with business partner Maverick Carter Friday on his HBO Sports series The Shop, with guest stars Todd Gurley of the Los Angeles Rams and rapper/actor Ice Cube, the Los Angeles Lakers forward called NFL owners “old white men” who, he said, acted like slave masters. “In the NFL they got a bunch of old white men owning teams and they got that slave mentality,” James said in the conversation. “And it’s like, ‘This is my team. You do what the f— I tell y’all to do. Or we get rid of y’all.’” James then said it was the players who made the league, not the league making the players. “The players are who make the ship go,” James said. “Every Sunday, without Todd Gurley and without Odell Beckham Jr., without those players, those guys, there is no football. And it’s the same in the NBA.” Sports Business writer Darren Rovell shared a tweet out of LeBron James rapping the lyrics of 21 Savage’s “ASMR” track, which prompted a flurry of chatter criticizing James for doing so although there were some who didn’t think he was taking the anti-Semitism route. However, James told ESPN that he truly didn’t mean to offend anyone by sharing out the song. “Apologies, for sure, if I offended anyone,” James said to ESPN after his squad lost 107-99 to the Memphis Grizzlies. “That’s not why I chose to share that lyric. I always [post lyrics]. That’s what I do. I ride in my car, I listen to great music, and that was the byproduct of it. So I actually thought it was a compliment, and obviously, it wasn’t through the lens of a lot of people. My apologies. It definitely was not the intent, obviously, to hurt anybody.” Surprised LeBron, who makes very few mistakes, put this out. Does quoting lyrics from a song absolve the person quoting from the responsibility behind the words? I’d argue no, especially with a following of 45 million. pic.twitter.com/efv9gkXres — Darren Rovell (@darrenrovell) December 23, 2018 — Photo: WENN

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LeBron James Compares NFL Owners To Slave Masters, Gets Flack For Sharing 21 Savage Lyrics

Did You Know: Little Caesars Founder Mike Ilitch Paid Rosa Parks’ Rent For 11 Years

Little Caesars Founder Mike Ilitch Paid Rosa Parks’ Rent Learn how $5 pizza empire helped a Civil Rights icon… Little Caesar’s founder Mike Ilitch sadly passed away last week at the age of 87. The Detroit businessman was a well-known philanthropis t and championed many charities throughout his beloved city. Now, one story about the pizza founder’s generosity has made the news following his death reports Sports Business Weekly . Judge Damon Keith, a friend of Ilitch, shared a touching story of how the businessman came to rescue of Rosa Parks during a dark time in her life: “It’s for $2,000, dated November the first, 1994. It’s from Little Caesars Enterprises to Riverfront Apartments, and I know it was just one of many,” said Keith, 91, who has been a U.S. Court of Appeals judge in Detroit for the last 46 years. “It’s important that people know what Mr. Mike Ilitch did for Ms. Rosa Parks because it’s symbolic of what he has always done for the people of our city.” On Aug. 31, 1994, Parks, then 81, was robbed and assaulted in her home in central Detroit. Keith called real estate developer Alfred Taubman, the owner of Riverfront Apartments, about finding a safer home for Parks. Taubman pledged to find the best home available. Illitch paid Parks’ rent every month until she died in 2005. The generous businessman supported numerous charities and helped everyone he met. Rest in power to this amazing man, you have an eternal invitation to the cookout!

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Did You Know: Little Caesars Founder Mike Ilitch Paid Rosa Parks’ Rent For 11 Years

Jada And Will, Together Or Not?

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Is this Jada’s way of letting us know there is no divorce for her and Will in the near future?  Earlier today she posted a song she recently recorded titled “Burn” on her Facebook page and dedicated to her hubby. Burn by jmusic0

Jada And Will, Together Or Not?

Atlanta Falcons Roddy White Rips Roger Goodell’s 20million Per Year Salary Cap.

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Roger Goodell’s 20million$ a year salary pisses off NFL player Here is what Roddy White Tweeted. “How in the hell can u pay a man this much money that cant run tackle or catch,” White wrote, posting a link to a ProFootballTalk.com story which referenced the Sports Business Journal’s report on Goodell’s compensation. “Roger Goodell is getting over never seen anything like it 20 million for looking over the league with tremendous help I guess the NFL is banking,” he continued. “The NFL is not a company it’s a nonprofit organization that makes a lot of profit.”

Atlanta Falcons Roddy White Rips Roger Goodell’s 20million Per Year Salary Cap.

Saints Merchandise Toes Copyright Line

Filed under: NFL Fans, Super Bowl, Sports Business and MediaNEW ORLEANS — We’ve all seen them, those enterprising individuals who camp out at sporting events and concerts and sell unlicensed bootleg merchandise for much cheaper than what’s available legitimately. And usually, the homemade merch is hilariously bad, tacky screen-printed designs on t-shirts that feel like they’re made out of thin paper towel, mostly only available in XXL.This phenomenon has always intrigued me. Who buys these things?In New Orleans the answer is, apparently, almost everybody. Because despite a mini-controversy in which the NFL tried to crack down on unlicensed merchandise using the “Who Dat” refrain so ubiquitous in the city, and then backtracking to state they’d only be cracking down on merchandise that pairs the phrase with NFL trademarked terms and logos, stores are taking advantage of the leeway generously and creatively, selling t-shirts that get the point across while side-stepping anything that can legitimately get them in any legal hot water.And they’re selling. I’ve seen far more of these on people than any jersey or NFL licensed t-shirts. Below, a sampling.