Muhammad Ali Launches A New Snack Line

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  • butterfly1964
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    #1

    Muhammad Ali Launches A New Snack Line

    WITH FOOD LINE, ALI MAKES OBESITY AN OPPONENT
    (Wednesday, 28 June 2006) - Contributed by MICHEL MARRIOTT - Last Updated ()
    Jumping into the ring with Weight Watchers and the South Beach Diet is the newest eat-healthy contender, Muhammad
    Ali. In a delicate dance of legend, marketing and money, Mr. Ali plans to introduce reduced-calorie foods and beverages
    for young adults, evoking his status as a three-time heavyweight boxing champion and American icon.
    The first products to roll out in convenience stores early next year will be packaged snacks with names like Rumble,
    Shuffle and Jabs — fruit-laden rolls and finger foods baked into vaguely signature shapes like boxing gloves and
    punching bags. Some flavors, like barbecued chicken and Buffalo wings, are a twist on snack classics, while others, like
    sweet corn and cole slaw, evoke the farmer's market.
    The new line has the lofty aim of fighting youth obesity, with no snack containing more than 150 calories. Each is fortified
    with vitamins and fiber, said Edward Rapp, a senior member of Mr. Ali's new company, GOAT Food and Beverage
    (GOAT being an acronym for — what else? — Greatest of All Time).
    Whether a line of snacks, no matter how nutritious or low in calories, cholesterol and fat, can dissuade many young
    Americans from disastrous and deeply ingrained eating habits remains to be seen, some nutritionists and obesity experts
    said.
    "People are often su****ious of healthier versions of food," said Kelly D. Brownell, founder and director of the Rudd
    Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale. "They assume that it won't taste good."
    The new venture comes at a time when business interests are increasingly looking to sports stars, like soccer's Pelé, to
    add magic to product lines. The global Pelé business, which includes endorsements for MasterCard, Nokia and Pepsi-
    Cola, could earn $30 million next year, and George Foreman has earned more than $137 million for promoting the grill
    that bears his name.
    Mr. Ali, who is battling Parkinson's syndrome, is considering how history will treat him, his wife, Lonnie, said.
    "What Muhammad is working on is his legacy," said Ms. Ali, who often acts as his spokeswoman. "How are people going
    to remember him? Muhammad says that we should all be in a race to do good."
    Yet the process of leveraging Mr. Ali's image into a line of snacks is fraught with obvious dangers. Add to this the
    complications of working with a man who has difficulty expressing himself and barely speaks above a whisper.
    The snacks signal the beginning of a more ambitious line of foods and beverages to follow. While none of the principals
    of GOAT would discuss what Mr. Ali stands to earn from his interests, Jack W. Plunkett, a food industry analyst,
    speculated that he could easily earn $1.5 million a year.
    Mr. Plunkett, chief executive of Plunkett Research, a market research firm in Houston, said nutritionally enhanced foods
    were increasingly good sellers. He also noted that Mars Inc., a multibillion-dollar company that is developing GOAT
    products with Mr. Ali and Peter Arnell, chairman of the Arnell Group, would be involved only if it believed the foods would
    be major sellers, earning $50 million to $100 million a year.
    In arrangements involving food products, Mr. Plunkett said, celebrities are usually cut in for 3 percent of sales.
    Mr. Arnell has been the catalyst for the new company, but he said that Mr. Ali, a longtime friend, was far from a passive
    player. He said he approached Mr. Ali two years ago, when he learned that Mars had been working on technologies to
    develop low-fat yet tasty food for young adults. Mars, he said, had no real concept of how to brand the foods, but Mr.
    Arnell did, bringing what he called the "aspirational currency" of Mr. Ali to the new line.
    He said Mr. Ali had approved every aspect of the creation and marketing. At times, he said, Mr. Ali would get "pent up
    with frustration in his inability to articulate in perfect words." "He would push himself to the limit when he felt I or someone
    wasn't understanding," Mr. Arnell recalled.
    The percentage of people age 6 to 19 who are overweight in the United States has more than tripled since 1980,
    according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Thirty percent of adults 20 years and older, more than 60 million
    people, are obese.
    But Mr. Ali does not have to look to studies for inspiration. Ms. Ali said their 15-year-old son, whose nickname is Sadi, is
    slightly overweight, a constant concern of Mr. Ali. "Let me tell you how this troubles him," Ms. Ali said. "Everyday he asks
    me, 'Does Sadi weigh more than me?' "
    She said he did, given that Mr. Ali, who had a serious spinal operation last fall, weighs less than 210 pounds.
    Mr. Arnell, 48, said that by changing his own eating habits, he shed about 250 of his almost 400 pounds in 30 months.
    GOAT's Shuffle snack, a mix of shapes, colors and textures, has only 35 fat calories compared with 111 for a
    comparable portion of potato chips, and reduced sodium. But like potato chips, the snacks beckon to be eaten in
    handfuls that could easily exceed their meager serving sizes of 1.06, 1.23 and 1.4 ounces.
    Morgan Downey, executive director of the American Obesity Association, a health education and advocacy group in
    Washington, said that in theory, the GOAT food sounded good. "But unless it ends up actually reducing the calories that
    the user consumes," Mr. Downey said, "it is not likely to have a benefit in terms of weight loss."
    The deal is the first brand creation for Mr. Ali, though he has lent his name to an Adidas line of shoes featuring famous
    athletes, and he allowed his image to be used in an Apple computer campaign. It follows an announcement in April that
    the entertainment company CKX had paid $50 million for an 80 percent stake in Mr. Ali's name, image and likeness.
    Slightly stooped, Mr. Ali entered a conference room earlier this month in the 90,000-square-foot Muhammad Ali Center
    overlooking Louisville. He barely spoke. When he managed to, it was hardly more than a whisper. Dressed in a dark suit,
    crisp white shirt and patterned tie, he listened to Mr. Arnell's presentation regarding the food's start-up, which is
    scheduled for Jan. 17, Mr. Ali's 65th birthday. Mr. Ali sampled some foods and followed Mr. Arnell's remarks while turning
    the pages of an oversized book of new marketing materials.
    He showed concern over a draft that suggested that his "greatest fight" would be against youth obesity. Ms. Ali pointed
    http://www.amhersttimes.com - Amherst Times Powered by Mambo Generated: 20 July, 2006, 20:39
    out to Mr. Arnell that Mr. Ali considered Parkinson's his greatest fight. The passage was changed.
    Mr. Rapp said the new foods were being engineered to fit into the "grazing" behavior of 16- to 24-year-olds. The foods
    are intended to be eaten throughout the day, in seven "rounds," he said. Round five, he said, is late in the day when
    people may need a vitamin-rich pick-me-up.
    In the end, the foods must be tasty. "It doesn't matter how good it is for them if they won't eat it," Mr. Rapp said.
  • BIGPOPPAPUMP
    Franchise Champion
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    #2
    Man is this old, think we posted it about 2 months ago.

    Comment

    • butterfly1964
      The HW Sugar Ray!
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      #3
      Originally posted by BIGPOPPAPUMP
      Man is this old, think we posted it about 2 months ago.
      Oh, word? I didn't know.

      Comment

      • Dirt E Gomez
        ***Stupendous***
        Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
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        #4
        They should call em' Shaken-O's.

        And don't bother telling me, yes, I'm going to hell.

        Comment

        • butterfly1964
          The HW Sugar Ray!
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          #5
          Originally posted by Dirt E Gomez
          They should call em' Shaken-O's.

          And don't bother telling me, yes, I'm going to hell.
          Ali tko14 Frazier.

          Comment

          • butterfly1964
            The HW Sugar Ray!
            Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
            • Oct 2005
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            #6
            Originally posted by Dirt E Gomez
            They should call em' Shaken-O's.

            And don't bother telling me, yes, I'm going to hell.
            Ali tko14 Frazier.

            Comment

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