Because anyone who thinks this just started on Friday afternoon is the silliest of gooses.
No doubt. I wondered if someone had been whispering to Cramer when he called for Chapek to get the axe, but didn’t remotely expect anything this quickly.
Because anyone who thinks this just started on Friday afternoon is the silliest of gooses.
Chadwick Boseman was meant to be the centerpiece and you can't blame them for that part, at least.
It's a serviceable movie. Nothing as captivating as the first one. Far too long.Overall I hear the reviews were good. Not everyone can see it opening weekend. I'm seeing it tomorrow with others.
But the most important thing to understand about Iger’s return has less to do with Disney’s particulars than with the media industry in general: When Iger left Disney, everyone in media was trying to become Netflix — fast-growing, all-in on streaming, and willing to burn big piles of money to make it work — because that’s what Wall Street wanted them to become.
Now Wall Street has changed its mind. Which is why Disney stock — along with that of most big media companies, including Netflix — has plummeted. A share of Disney was worth nearly $200 in the spring of 2021; now it goes for half of that, and that’s after investors gave it a quick bump this morning after Iger’s return was announced.
“It’s a very different landscape than even 18 months ago,” an executive at one of Disney’s competitors texted to me. “Hopefully he can figure out the model. No one has yet.”
The new, theoretical model: Figure out how to create a streaming service people will pay for, but without burning a gazillion dollars — over the last nine months, Disney has lost more than $2.5 billion on streaming, and it lost another $1 billion a year earlier — while continuing to prop up existing businesses, like cable TV, that make a lot of money but are in permanent decline.
Welcome back, Bob! No pressure or anything!While Iger is rightly praised for three acquisitions he made that transformed the company — Pixar, Lucasfilm, and Marvel, all snapped up within a few years of each other — that’s no guarantee of future performance.
It’s quite reasonable, for instance, to argue that Iger dramatically overpaid for the Fox assets he acquired, which have yet to yield much benefit beyond removing a competitor. And Iger came very, very close to buying both Vice and Twitter — two moves that would have guaranteed enormous headaches and quite possibly real losses.
The board’s outreach to Iger and discussion to replace Chapek came after the board married internal complaints about Chapek’s leadership with concerns following Disney’s most recent quarterly earnings report, said the people, who asked not to be named because the discussions were private. One of the executives to express a lack of confidence in Chapek was Christine McCarthy, Disney’s chief financial officer, two of the people said.
McCarthy was Iger’s CFO before he departed as CEO in 2020. She has held the role since 2015. She has an established relationship with the board given her longevity in the position, the people said.
You are correct Sir. Iger did serious damage to the parks and Chapek simply kept going in that direction and then some. I don't see any major changes at the parks as a result of this.Remember folks. We have simply gone from worse back to bad.
Maybe. Maybe not. Time will tell....and Im saying a great deal of Chapek's bad, was really Iger's bad.
So while I agree that anything over Chapek, the fact of the matter is that bringing Iger back is very much a doubling down on alot of the things that were ushered in on Chapek's watch. It's just going to be candy coated now.
Industrial average dropped about 8%... so not sure what world you are looking at. Were you chasing Metaverse or something?While the rest of the world also saw a 30% drop too... righhhhht
Maybe no changes... and maybe Iger will have reflected on what he did last time around and change some things. Being out of the role of CEO for a while gives him the opportunity to do things differently without admitting he was wrong the first time. Few CEOs would ever admit they were wrong while they were still CEOs sailing the same direction.You are correct Sir. Iger did serious damage to the parks and Chapek simply kept going in that direction and then some. I don't see any major changes at the parks as a result of this.
Of that I'm sure. Boseman, sadly, isn't in it. As for length, I believe it. Andor is also praised for being a great series. But I think you could have told the story in half the episodes.It's a serviceable movie. Nothing as captivating as the first one. Far too long.
This thread is moving really quickly but I have some honest questions to those that are happy about this..
Are you shareholder?
Do you think you're going to get back what was lost under Chapek?
Do you think the parks will see any benefit to this change?
What exactly did Iger do that was amazing?
D'Amaro likely has an existing relationship with Iger.It seems those inside the walls are thrilled about this.
Based on what I've been reading, it seems Chapek is a micromanager, who took budgetary power away from creative executives, as opposed to Iger who is more of a delegater, and allowed them to have budgetary power.
There's been a lot of discourse about D'amaro, but I was reading the D'amaro was very much against paid fastpass, until he no longer was able to be against it. That he was very constrained under Chapek, and had to keep a low profile and follow his lead.
Based on what I have been reading, Iger gave them room to make decisions themselves. So Chapek was able to have much more power as park lead, where as D'amaro had WAY less power under Chapek as park lead.
So now we see if Iger goes back to his way of leading, and how D'amaro works under that.
I don't think overall vacation prices will come down, but i would love it if they rolled genie+ revenue back into hotel/ticket prices and gave FP+ as a free reservation system another shot. Split it between advanced reservations and day-of reservations. They just need to limit the number of passes per hour better than before, from what i understand genie+ gives out fewer passes and the standby lines do move faster now than pre-covid.It seems those inside the walls are thrilled about this.
Based on what I've been reading, it seems Chapek is a micromanager, who took budgetary power away from creative executives, as opposed to Iger who is more of a delegater, and allowed them to have budgetary power.
There's been a lot of discourse about D'amaro, but I was reading the D'amaro was very much against paid fastpass, until he no longer was able to be against it. That he was very constrained under Chapek, and had to keep a low profile and follow his lead.
Based on what I have been reading, Iger gave them room to make decisions themselves. So Chapek was able to have much more power as park lead, where as D'amaro had WAY less power under Chapek as park lead.
So now we see if Iger goes back to his way of leading, and how D'amaro works under that.
DCA 2.0 was indeed a success but that was messed up by DCA 3.0 which was also under Iger's watch.DCA 2.0,
D'Amaro likely has an existing relationship with Iger.
This all leaves me wonder what role Kareem Daniel has going forward, especially given his close proximity to Chapek and the very person that micromanaged the budgetary power away from the other executives.
NASDAQ - YTD -26%Industrial average dropped about 8%... so not sure what world you are looking at. Were you chasing Metaverse or something?
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