Bill Cosby, Jared Fogle and other pitchmen gone bad

Bill Cosby charged with sexual assault
Bill Cosby charged with sexual assault

Bill Cosby was once a commercial icon. He served as a pitchman for Jell-O pudding from 1974 until 2003 and worked briefly for the company in 2010.

More recently, Cosby's reputation has been tarnished -- dozens of women have come forward with allegations of rape. And on Wednesday, the comedian was charged with sexual assault related to a 2004 encounter with a woman in Pennsylvania.

Months before Cosby was charged, Kraft-Heinz (KHC), the owners of Jell-O, told CNNMoney that it no longer has a "working relationship" with Cosby.

While Jell-O had long cut ties with Cosby, other companies were forced to sever relationships -- or deal with fallout -- when their spokespeople got in trouble.

Jared Fogle

Earlier this year, Subway suspended its relationship with Jared Fogle when allegations of child pornography emerged. And the sandwich shop quickly severed ties with him completely when headlines began circulating that he would take a plea deal.

In November, Fogle was sentenced to more than 15 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to charges of child pornography and crossing state lines to pay for sex with minors.

Kate Moss

In 2005, the British supermodel lost endorsements with H&M, Burberry (BBRYF), Rimmel London and Chanel after photos surfaced of her allegedly using cocaine. A spokesperson for H&M told CNN at the time that "after evaluating the situation, we have decided that a campaign with Kate Moss is not consistent with H&M's clear disassociation from drugs."

Chanel said its decision not to renew its contract with Moss was unrelated to the alleged drug use.

Lance Armstrong

The Tour de France winner's involvement in a 2012 doping scandal cost Armstrong deals with Nike, Anheuser-Busch, Oakley and other cycling industry sponsors.

Armstrong stepped down as chairman of Livestrong, the cancer charity he founded in 1997, to separate the organization from his scandal.

Tiger Woods

After news of Woods' infidelity broke in 2010, he was dropped by major endorsers such as Gatorade, AT&T, Accenture and Tag Heuer.

Despite the allegations and subsequent divorce from his wife, Elin Nordegren, both EA Sports and Nike kept their contracts with Woods.

Michael Phelps

The record breaking Olympic medal holder lost a deal in 2009 with Kellogg Company after a photo surfaced of him smoking from a bong. A spokeswoman for Kellogg Co. (K) said at the time: "Michael's most recent behavior is not consistent with the image of Kellogg ... and we have made a decision not to extend his contract."

Michael Vick

The NFL quarterback lost a deal with Nike in 2007 after he was convicted of dog fighting. But Nike eventually re-signed Vick in 2011.

"Michael acknowledges his past mistakes," a Nike spokesperson said at the time. "We do not condone those actions, but we support the positive changes he has made to better himself off the field."

Adrian Peterson

After allegations surfaced last year that Peterson had harshly disciplined his four-year-old son, the NFL running back's endorsement deals suffered. Nike and Castrol motor oil, a unit of BP (BP), dropped him.

Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly said the Kellogg Company made Wheaties.

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