An airline boss, who’s had turns as a Premier League club owner with QPR and with his own F1 motor sport team, has apologised for posting a photograph of himself topless and getting a massage during a work meeting.
Tony Fernandes, the founder of Air Asia, shared the image on LinkedIn. However it was removed a few days later, amid a torrent of criticism.
His post drew criticism from the internet that it seemed and was deemed “inappropriate“.
In the caption, he wrote, “Was a stressful week and Veranita Yosephine suggested a massage. Got to love Indonesia and AirAsia culture that I Can have a massage and do a management meeting.”
“We are making big progress and I have now finalized Capital A structure. Exciting days ahead. Proud of what we have built and never have lost sight of the finish,” he added.
![AirAsia CEO Sits Shirtless In Management Meeting While Getting A Massage, Draws Criticism AirAsia CEO Sits Shirtless In Management Meeting While Getting A Massage, Draws Criticism](https://c.ndtvimg.com/2023-10/3r68m2so_air-asia-ceo_625x300_17_October_23.jpg)
Since being shared on the platform, its amassed plenty of commentary, mostly of a negative hue.
“A grown man, who is the chief executive of a publicly listed company, conducts a management meeting with his shirt off as he gets a massage.
Remove “who is the chief executive of a publicly listed company” and it is still inappropriate,” a user said.
A second person added, “Work at AirAsia, where meetings are as gross as our passenger experience. You have managed to capture everything from inappropriate entitlement to exemplary C Suite tone deafness in a single image. Bravo!”
“I’m going to assume that this meeting took place long after the workday was over and most of the office was empty (except a few C-level), but at least put on a shirt for the photo.,” commented another person.
“I hope not but I think someone hacked into his LI and wrote this,” remarked a user.
“Yea, maybe this isn’t the best way to show off work culture? Don’t think you are giving the intended impression you hoped it would,” said another user.
A sixth person said, “Tony when you said Air Asia had an open culture I didn’t expect it to be THIS open… “