el_super
Well-Known Member
I'd argue that the parks have been subordinated to the commercial products/retail side of things for some time. And that segment is less lucrative than 1) the films/TV division, which itself is being subsumed by the emphasis on streaming. Again, the internal corporate advocates from within the Parks/consumer products sides of things have an emphasis on the retail merchandise side of things, and that includes the savior-in-waiting Josh D'Amaro.
But there is a perfectly good explanation for that: Consumer Products as a whole, has a vastly wider audience than the parks do.
How many (unique) people in the US go to a Disney park in a year? 30 or 40 million? about 10%? How many see a marvel movie, or subscribe to Disney+ or buy a Mickey Mouse plush at Target? The parks are still a very niche segment.
Simple. Parks (except for something like the pandemic) are reliable. Year after year. Hollywood - not so much. For every "Frozen" there's a "John Carter Of Mars"
Part of that reliability is the SLOW return on investment. They build something expecting it to make a return n DECADES versus a year or two. The parks make sense to Disney because they are a low risk/low yield investment. There's no real guarantee either, that simply redirecting money from content creation to the parks would have the same return.
They're spending something like 30+ billion on content creation next year right? That's probably about 10 Disney style theme parks. Do you really think that 10 more Disney parks would make them that much more money?
Gotta think that reliability is also the reason the parks aren’t more of a focus. If people will go regardless of what they do there’s not much incentive to make them the priority.
Let's also not forget that conventional wisdom would say that the park business is DRIVEN by the brand/IP. You need the studio pumping out new movies, new shows and new properties not just to draw the direct connection to the park experience (like offering a new Star Wars land) but also in the connection to the brand and the favorability of someone picking Disney over a competitor because of how ubiquitous it is, and how strong that connection is to the audience.
Disney *IS* the brand.
You’re going to cherry pick last year, of all years, to make that argument?
Parks typically made about 20-30%. 40% would be an anomaly. Maybe if you have time you can average it out over the last 10 years?