baymenxpac
Well-Known Member
A story as big as alleged would be far more clicks.
would it? even on this specific thread, where we all come eagerly looking for higher level discourse, the china stuff has been met with a lot of, "MEH! WHO CARES?!" i know we're talking about the wall street journal here, and the business focus of the outlet would seem to imply the story would have more legs in the traffic department than a blow-by-blow breakdown of a frozen overlay, but try to explain each story to a layperson and see which they find more interesting. after all, we are talking about america here, land of the willfully ignorant.
I often wonder what most of these Disney defenders do for a living. I bucket it like this:
1.) stay at home spouse who loves to spend their SO money like a drunken sailor. Never did a day of real work on their life.
2.) on govt assistance of some type
3.) works for Disney
4.) has some type of low level hourly job and doesn't understand how the real world works
Am I missing any?
i dunno, man. i don't really know what the demos are in that category, but i guess the pixie dust holds a pretty powerful hold over someone.
i should mention that i don't like to chime in a lot here just to say meaningless words. usually, i try to reserve my posts for when i have something insightful to say. i'm an amateur when it comes to attraction load capacity and financial figures and all that. but what i do know is how to be a really good PR person (and i'm talking about the kind that is some 23 year old that, "like, totally wants to introduce you to our CEO, who's, like, super interesting.") i know how it works.
the president of my firm and i had a 20 minute talk this morning about how disney turned the narrative like this, and we were lauding it as a brilliant case of corporate comms. as a fan of disney that wants the current execs to be held accountable for the sham job they're doing with the brand, it pains me. but as a professional, it's a case study. and sorry, no, it's not a conspiracy theory.