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Articles
about the Iditarod Even so, the race has commercial appeal to many -- especially in Alaska, where it's the state's biggest sporting event. * Wells Fargo recently re-signed with a $1 million, 5-year deal for National Bank of Alaska branches. * Burger King's largest franchisee in Alaska is a race sponsor. ''If we weren't involved, the community would wonder, 'What's wrong with this company, and why isn't it supporting the major event of the year?' '' says Larry Baker, who owns 23 Burger King stores in the state.
But Thursday, Burger King asked Iditarod organizers to remove a link to
its corporate Web site. ''We are not sponsors,'' spokeswoman Kim Miller
says. * An e-commerce shop on the Iditarod.com Web site sells everything from $100 Iditarod jackets to $295 prints. Still, sponsors must deal with public-relations fallout. At least 115 dogs have died in the race over the past 29 years. Organizers say that's a tiny fraction of the 5,000 dogs that have raced and say owners treat the dogs with utmost care. Animal-rights activists say the race also results in terrible injuries to dogs and is inhumane. Experts say the issue for sponsors is not whether the race is actually cruel to the dogs. The issue for marketers is public perception. And animal-rights activists might be winning that battle. ''Some sponsors must ask themselves: Why sponsor an event that could elicit the wrath of some good-willed consumer group?'' says Roberta Clarke, marketing professor at Boston University. Amy Rhodes of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals says that many corporations have dropped out as sponsors out of concern that the Iditarod exploits animals. Among those no longer with the Iditarod: Pizza Hut, Pfizer and Costco. Most sponsors that drop out tend to be those that do not have a large financial commitment, says Stan Hooley, Iditarod executive director. ''Whatever grief they get from the animal-rights groups is more distraction than they want.''
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