MagicHappens1971
Well-Known Member
I will say, they are very cute.Disney made a bunch of cute Power Point slides....
I will say, they are very cute.Disney made a bunch of cute Power Point slides....
Well, we have our answer. Yikes. Guess we’re not seeing Willow season 2, since so few watched season 1.
View attachment 717256
The general explanation when these moves have happened elsewhere is it saves them from having to pay residuals to the producers/writers/creators. Even though those series massively underperformed, they’re not a complete “sunk cost” as there are ongoing fees and costs incurred with continued streaming. Locking them in the vault (forever?) takes care of that problem.Hang on, why are Disney removing them when they’ve already been made and added to Disney+
I’d understand not making any new series but I don’t get this?
The general explanation when these moves have happened elsewhere is it saves them from having to pay residuals to the producers/writers/creators. Even though those series massively underperformed, they’re not a complete “sunk cost” as there are ongoing fees and costs incurred with continued streaming. Locking them in the vault (forever?) takes care of that problem.
Yes. The WB/Batgirl stuff was a bit more unique as that was a pure tax write off that I think they could take advantage of given the M&A aspect. That may require them to memory hole it fully. Other shows getting pulled don’t have that aspect at play. For example, I think WB hinted at licensing out shows to other streamers as a way to recoup more costs externally.Or shifting them to something (e.g. digital downloads, being used on a FAST service) where they generate some revenue directly if watched which can cover the licensing fees and make them worthwhile to be offered.
For anyone who doesn’t speak financials this basically means there is a drastic reduction in the value of the asset.From a new 8-K filing.
Item 2.06 Material Impairments.
As previously announced, The Walt Disney Company (together with the subsidiaries through which its various businesses are actually conducted, the “Company”) is in the process of reviewing content, primarily on its direct-to-consumer (“DTC”) services, for alignment with a strategic change in approach to content curation and as a result is removing certain content from its platforms. On May 26, 2023, the Company removed certain produced content from its DTC services. As a result, the Company will record a $1.5 billion impairment charge in its fiscal third quarter financial statements to adjust the carrying value of these content assets to fair value. The Company is continuing its review and currently anticipates additional produced content will be removed from its DTC and other platforms, largely during the remainder of its third fiscal quarter. As a result, the Company currently estimates it may incur further impairment charges of up to approximately $0.4 billion related to produced content. The Company does not expect any material cash expenditures in connection with the impairment charges related to produced content. In addition, the Company may terminate certain license agreements for the right to use content on its platforms, which would result in the removal of licensed content from its platforms and lead to impairment and/or contract termination charges as well as cash payments. The Company currently expects that any such charges and payments related to licensed content would be meaningfully less than the impairment charges related to produced content.
Link to the filing below.
SEC-Show
otp.tools.investis.com
I think it shows why they removed what looked like otherwise harmless content... the tax advantage.For anyone who doesn’t speak financials this basically means there is a drastic reduction in the value of the asset.
In this case I believe that asset is content.
I’m sure I will be corrected immediately if I’m wrong.
Well they know better than anyone what attendance and D+ subscriptions are looking like.I think it shows why they removed what looked like otherwise harmless content... the tax advantage.
It wasn't 'storage space' or other non-sense... it was because they could get WAY more value from the write-down then the content itself offered.
Seems a bit of a gimmick, but they are really focusing on making the financials look better for q3 and q4
I think it's all back to the fiscals that ultimately ran chapek out. They are rearranging all the chairs and trying to establish what the new baseline is... and taking fat write-offs along the way to make the top line numbers look more attractive. They want the annual numbers to show more than what they will achieve in just the last 6months in terms of changing course. Massive write-offs help that... but they are also easy to look past.Well they know better than anyone what attendance and D+ subscriptions are looking like.
Maybe they sense trouble on the horizon.
Does this mean this content is not just going away in a vault, but rather locked in a box, covered in cement, and dropped in a deep trench in the ocean? Seems more than just not wanting to pay residuals and licensing for a short period of time.I think it's all back to the fiscals that ultimately ran chapek out. They are rearranging all the chairs and trying to establish what the new baseline is... and taking fat write-offs along the way to make the top line numbers look more attractive. They want the annual numbers to show more than what they will achieve in just the last 6months in terms of changing course. Massive write-offs help that... but they are also easy to look past.
TLDR - Looks like a massive corporate yard sale to help the annual report to me.
You're wrong. Pixie dusters bring their own magic. That's a you problem. Lol.It’s all about the bottom line and shareholders, not their customers other than seeing how little they can give and how much they can charge and get away with it
I forgot we are the magic.You're wrong. Pixie dusters bring their own magic. That's a you problem. Lol.
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