Will Subway face a backlash over Jared Fogle charges?

Fogle admits to paying for sex with minors

NEW YORK - The downfall of Jared Fogle risks tarnishing Subway's reputation, even as the sandwich chain seeks to distance itself from its former pitchman.

It's not clear how customers will react to Fogle pleading guilty to allegations that he paid for sex acts with minors and received child pornography, since it doesn't have anything to do with Subway's food or prices. But some of the response on social media highlights the strong feelings the case has aroused.

"The fact that there was a #subway in my high school cafeteria just went from convenient to insidious," said one commenter on Twitter.

The association of the company's name with crimes that evoke such universal disgust also come at a rough juncture for Subway. The company faces intense competition and concerns that it has overexpanded. The company's founder and CEO is fighting cancer. And at a time when attitudes about the definition of healthy are changing, Subway is trying to convince people about the quality of its food by removing artificial ingredients from its menu.

Subway spokesman named a suspect in child porn case

"For a while, when you see a Subway ad, you're going to think about that child pornography charge," said Allen Adamson of the brand consulting firm Landor Associates.

Fogle faces between five and 12 years in federal prison. U.S. Attorney Josh Minkler said Wednesday that investigators confiscated dozens of phones, DVDs, CDs, Mp3 players and other electronic equipment during their investigation.

"This is about using wealth, status and secrecy to illegally exploit children," Minkler said during a press conference in Indianapolis to announce the plea deal.

After previously saying that it has ended its relationship with Fogle, Subway on Wednesday issued a statement over Twitter condemning his actions.

"Jared Fogle's actions are inexcusable and do not represent our brand's values," the company said.

Companies like having famous representatives because it's is a way to make people feel like that they could somehow be more like those individuals. In Fogle's case, that meant losing weight and being able to keep it off. But such relationships also can backfire when celebrities run into trouble.

The charges against Fogle also are tough because he wasn't just a one-time celebrity endorser; he is famous solely for dropping more than 200 pounds with his "Subway diet."

Subway leaned on Fogle's story for more than 15 years as it more than doubled its locations in the U.S. The pitchman appeared in Subway TV ad as recently as last month, on the day his home was raided by state and federal investigators raided his home, according to iSpot.tv, which measures national TV ads. That ad recapped how Fogle lost weight, and the latest chapter in his life as a family man with two children.

It was one of three Subway ads featuring Fogle up to that point in the year, out of a total of 40 different Subway ads, according to iSpot.tv.

Julie Carlton, a 28-year-old graduate student who was at a Subway in New York City Wednesday, said she doesn't plan to stop going to the chain because she doesn't think the company is to blame for Fogle's actions.

She said she was much more upset with Chick-fil-A after the fried chicken chain's president publicly reaffirmed his support of what he called the "biblical definition of the family unit" that did not include same-sex marriage. The move provoked an outcry from gay rights supporters.

"There's a big difference between with what happed with Jared and what happened with Chick-fil-A," said Carlton, who noted that Subway cut ties with Fogle.

Still, the revelations about Fogle come at a bad time for Subway, which had already been struggling with sales.

Subway is privately held and doesn't publicly report its financial results. But average annual sales at U.S. Subway locations fell 3 percent last year, according to industry tracker Technomic. That was the first decline since 2006.

The company is dealing with changing attitudes about food, with industry executives saying people are paying closer attention to things like ingredients, not just calories or fat. To keep pace, Subway said in June it would remove artificial ingredients from its food, following similar decisions by others.

Overextension might be part of the problem, too. Subway says it has about 27,000 locations in just the U.S., which is nearly twice as many locations as McDonald's, the next biggest chain.

Don Sniegowski, editor of Blue Maumau, a site for franchisees, said it's difficult to predict how business might be affected by the Fogle scandal, but he thinks sales will be hurt slightly.

"You think of Subway, and you think of Jared chasing around little girls. It's going to mitigate people's decision to go there," he said.

It's not yet known how Subway will change course in its marketing, if it all.

The chain has already started trying to erase Fogle from its history. After Fogle's house was raided for unspecified reasons on July 7, the company scrubbed mentions of him from its website, including a dance game with Fogle's famous giant pants. It also asked franchisees to remove menu boards that bore his image, and a scene with Fogle filmed for "Sharknado 3" was never used.

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