erasure fan1
Well-Known Member
I thought I did by saying none of them would do substantially better.My assertion (which you didn't even respond to) is that they would've done fine. It would have been a poor year, but not one deemed a colossal failure.
Guardians and elemental were good. Haunted mansion was fine. All the others were sub par in my eyes. Indy, wish, the marvels, lightyear, strange world, mermaid, all not very good.Their 2023 movies were largely... fine. And fine Disney movies typically still make a silly amount of money. Is it unreasonable to think that they might have been able to make up the $700m shortfall (or at least most of it) if there weren't a whole lot of toxicity around Disney?
There's always been a hate campaign around Disney. That's what happens when you are the top dog. I know plenty of people who have hated Disney since the 90s just because they feel they are a greedy company so they refuse to watch anything of theirs. Sniping at Disney is nothing new.
A reason I don't think the hate network diminished their earnings as significantly as you say. Is because if people had issues with the "controversial" stuff. It wouldn't take long after release for word of mouth to do it's thing. People talk, and they'd say did you know lightyear has a gay crush in it? If that's something you won't go to the movies for, just because you eliminate the hate network doesn't mean they'll go see it.
That's the flaw in this whole debate. If you hate diversity, why on earth would the hate network matter? You aren't going to go anyway, it's not like any of it was a secret. And if Disney hid it, once those people found out it was there, they tell their friends and they probably don't show up to your next film.
That's why I say the impact would be minimal. If people are going to hate, they're going to hate. They don't need someone to tell them to hate. So I'm just curious as to why people think that those people would show up no matter the situation?