They all have their favorite charities that they put their names to, Kyle Petty has the Victory Junction thing, etc. Then, they all have their Nascar required functions. Most of them have race teams at some level, or another, and the older ones usually had dealerships for the auto manufacturer that they drive for. Dale Earnhardt Sr. had a bunch of Chevy dealerships, etc. Rick Hendrick started out with dealerships. I do not know of any other athletes, as a whole, or, individually, that do more charity work, or, give back more than the good ole Nascar boyz.
None of it. NASCAR sponsors don't make cars.
This is completely up to the sponsor and the details outlined in the sponsors contract with the driver.
In 2010, Coors Light is the official beer of Nascar. As far as driver's sponsors, Kasey Kahne drives the Budweiser Ford and Kurt Busch drives the Miller Lite Dodge.
Partly from ticket sales, part from NASCAR's television deal, and some from sponsors.
They change sponsors because some companies do not want to be a part of it. Or they do not want to spend any more money.
A NASCAR driver makes more money than a soccer player. NASCAR drivers also make a lot of money from sponsors.
Currently, Jeff Gordon's primary sponsors are AARP's "Drive To End Hunger", Axalta Coating Systems and Pepsi.
Cumulatively some $20 million plus.
Only if Speed Racer sponsors a race.
pbr, mx, drag racing, nascar, gay pride parade
It depends on they're team and sponsors. They are contracted.
The U.S. Army no longer sponsors Ryan Newman. They left Nascar following the 2012 season.