Question on ticket prices
Nothing to announce at this time. Most of Florida attendance is from multi-day
Umm, so that may not bode well for locals....
Question on ticket prices
Nothing to announce at this time. Most of Florida attendance is from multi-day
Plus Passholders (which was not mentioned).Most of Florida attendance is from multi-day
I think that the issue is - the trend of a decline in ad revenue, this quarter and previous quarters; part of the changing media landscape. This quarter ad revenue was -7%; attributed to ESPN/ the College Bowl games, 3 this year vs 6 games last year as well as fewer programming hours. 'Other entrants to the marketplace' do not have the same quantity of commercial interruptions....so, as Disney shifts to a direct-to-consumer model (DtC), maybe they are slowly going to shift away from ad revenue towards subscription revenue on mobile-friendly devices? Here is more of what he was saying (again, not an exact quote):By commercials, does he mean ads for that little blue pill and the like? Not that I want to second guess the CEO of the largest entertainment company on the planet, but he does realize that's where broadcast TV gets its revenue from - ad time sold? And that unless that broadcast ABC channel is licensed to corporate (thinking LA and NY markets), that ABC channel I hardly ever watch except for Saturdays during the fall, is an affiliate and dependent on that ad revenue for its existence. Didn't he start out as a weatherman at a network affiliate?
I think that the issue is - the trend of a decline in ad revenue, this quarter and previous quarters; part of the changing media landscape. This quarter ad revenue was -7%; attributed to ESPN/ the College Bowl games, 3 this year vs 6 games last year as well as fewer programming hours. 'Other entrants to the marketplace' do not have the same quantity of commercial interruptions....so, as Disney shifts to a direct-to-consumer model (DtC), maybe they are slowly going to shift away from ad revenue towards subscription revenue on mobile-friendly devices? Here is more of what he was saying (again, not an exact quote):
Iger – decline in kids’ viewing on linear channels, bit of an off-cycle, proliferation of programming in other places.
Mickey Mouse Roadster Racers, Tangled series, and product cycle, we think that the ratings are likely to improve
with addition of new shows creatively strong. Chance of doing well from disruption perspective because of the n
ame Disney – greater demand to license our product on other platforms, and possibility of taking it DtC. In UK, Disney life, movies, tv programming, digital books and music. Experimental stage, tech platform, churn rates, pricing.
Brand and product behind it to be able to take it DtC. Blend of linear channels.
One benefit of cord cutting, no stupid commercials....
By commercials, does he mean ads for that little blue pill and the like? Not that I want to second guess the CEO of the largest entertainment company on the planet, but he does realize that's where broadcast TV gets its revenue from - ad time sold? And that unless that broadcast ABC channel is licensed to corporate (thinking LA and NY markets), that ABC channel I hardly ever watch except for Saturdays during the fall, is an affiliate and dependent on that ad revenue for its existence. Didn't he start out as a weatherman at a network affiliate?
I think that the issue is - the trend of a decline in ad revenue, this quarter and previous quarters; part of the changing media landscape. This quarter ad revenue was -7%; attributed to ESPN/ the College Bowl games, 3 this year vs 6 games last year as well as fewer programming hours. 'Other entrants to the marketplace' do not have the same quantity of commercial interruptions....so, as Disney shifts to a direct-to-consumer model (DtC), maybe they are slowly going to shift away from ad revenue towards subscription revenue on mobile-friendly devices? Here is more of what he was saying (again, not an exact quote):
Iger – decline in kids’ viewing on linear channels, bit of an off-cycle, proliferation of programming in other places.
Mickey Mouse Roadster Racers, Tangled series, and product cycle, we think that the ratings are likely to improve
with addition of new shows creatively strong. Chance of doing well from disruption perspective because of the name
Disney – greater demand to license our product on other platforms, and possibility of taking it DtC. In UK, Disney life, movies, tv programming, digital books and music. Experimental stage, tech platform, churn rates, pricing.
Brand and product behind it to be able to take it DtC. Blend of linear channels.
I think that the issue is - the trend of a decline in ad revenue, this quarter and previous quarters; part of the changing media landscape. This quarter ad revenue was -7%; attributed to ESPN/ the College Bowl games, 3 this year vs 6 games last year as well as fewer programming hours. 'Other entrants to the marketplace' do not have the same quantity of commercial interruptions....so, as Disney shifts to a direct-to-consumer model (DtC), maybe they are slowly going to shift away from ad revenue towards subscription revenue on mobile-friendly devices? Here is more of what he was saying (again, not an exact quote):
Iger – decline in kids’ viewing on linear channels, bit of an off-cycle, proliferation of programming in other places.
Mickey Mouse Roadster Racers, Tangled series, and product cycle, we think that the ratings are likely to improve
with addition of new shows creatively strong. Chance of doing well from disruption perspective because of the name
Disney – greater demand to license our product on other platforms, and possibility of taking it DtC. In UK, Disney life, movies, tv programming, digital books and music. Experimental stage, tech platform, churn rates, pricing.
Brand and product behind it to be able to take it DtC. Blend of linear channels.
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