I don't think that's likely at all. This deal was all about the expansion of properties. They wont be rebranded as Disney IP. I think that where other deals, namely Pixar and Lucasfilm, were about bringing other properties with similar audiences and which already had relationships with Disney into the Disney family rather than leaving them out as competitors, strengthening Disney's brand image, relevance, and existing assets, this is all about the tertiary distribution and media wings. Save for some of the film properties, this is moreso in line with the expansion of the company we saw with ESPN and ABC, things that don't really have anything to do with Disney but extend its reach in the entertainment industry to as wide an audience as possible. This isn't about parks, but about making a competitive streaming service to Netflix, and having more market share of US box office (would be near/surpass 50% of theatrical). The weirdest part of this deal is that the strategy of making their own streaming service and now owning a majority stake of Hulu is redundant. What is to happen with Hulu? What properties will go on Disney's service? Disney isn't acquiring the Fox network or Fox Sports, just stuff produced by 20th and 21st century fox and all of those channels (fx, etc). But had the channels been acquired as well, there would be no competitor to ESPN and there would be one less competing entertainment empire to Disney/ABC.What's the likelihood of Disney selling off parts of Fox, such as The Simpsons, Alien, and other properties that don't match their image?
He's a giver, isn't he?“The acquisition of this stellar collection of businesses from 21st Century Fox reflects the increasing consumer demand for a rich diversity of entertainment experiences that are more compelling, accessible and convenient than ever before,” Iger said in a statement Thursday morning.
Who wanted Disney to purchase Fox???
Apparently...we did! And we is smart.
At this point, what would be the difference who owns Disney parks? Fox, Comcast, Disney? One of them gives us the feels, but that's the only difference at this point between those companies. Disney is a corporate monster, and it will never be any resemblance of what it once was. It doesn't matter if Iger stays for ten years longer or is replaced next month after a shocking expose reveals he makes the women he works with dress like wild animals for his pleasure. I'm not broken as a result, it is what it is, but I care a whole lot less about Disney as a result. Ten or twenty years down the line the parks will probably be unrecognizable.Glad to see Disney being the one to take over other companies, instead of the other way around. Can you imagine if DIsney hadn't become as big as it has in the last 15 years, and if in an alternate 2017 the sheer panic we'd share over the news Fox or Paramount or General Electric were buying Disney with vague plans for the Parks Division?
That said, not sure there's a lot of immediate theme park plug ins from this news.
The only Fox division that stuck out to me was the National Geographic channel, which could get a NatGeo branded show or exhibit in Animal Kingdom immediately. WIth possibilities for Adventureland longer term.
Maybe they can build a restaurant based on Fox news? FOX News Bistro. We would have dinner in the FOX news room and be served by news anchor look a likes. Who doesn't want to have dinner with Julie Banderas, Maria Bartiromo and Shannon Bream? It would be attached to a dark ride that takes us through various "important" new stories with a FOX attitude. It will be a hit in conservative Orange county.
“The acquisition of this stellar collection of businesses from 21st Century Fox reflects the increasing consumer demand for a rich diversity of entertainment experiences that are more compelling, accessible and convenient than ever before,” Iger said in a statement Thursday morning.
Who wanted Disney to purchase Fox???
Apparently...we did! And we is smart.
Avatar where tram dropoff-splitsville would have been nice but cheap retail corridors are more the DLR style. I am not concerned about the parks being impacted by this at all, because this is clearly a play to get as much content as possible to put on their own streaming service. I do however worry that it is such a sprawling entertainment empire that it would be hard for anybody to manage. Disney's acquisitions in the past, save for the network tv and espn stuff, all fit the disney brand to an extent. Eisner era acquisitions of this scale that created the disney of today, as successful as it is, have distracted and drawn investments away from Disney's core identity and assets. With so many production, movie, animation studios, will any future executive really care about theme parks?
I don't think disney should intervene in what kind of content fox produces; the strength of the acquisition is in its diversification. And the same goes for P+R; if they are doing well, the should grow organically, though we know how the board has bullied parks into being their promo wing. With a larger company overall and more cash flowing, major investments will only become easier. However, again, more investors to worry about means more conservative spending. Disney almost went bankrupt as a small company building tokyo disneyland and EPCOT. To do that today, they'd have to spend 100 billion dollars, which would never happen.
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Twentieth Century Fox World is under construction in Malaysia.
http://www.themeparx.com/20th-century-fox-world-malaysia/
Will some of the attractions make their way to Disneyland?
I'd rather have had Disney buy CBS than Fox tbh. At least then we wouldn't have to worry about Tower of Terror being removed at DHS.
But folks, Don't count your chickens just yet, the deal could be cancelled or modified.
http://www.latimes.com/business/hol...y-fox-regulatory-concerns-20171214-story.html
>>Walt Disney Co.’s proposed takeover of 21st Century Fox is likely to raise thorny regulatory concerns at a time when the Justice Department has been putting media mergers under the microscope.
Disney’s $52.4-billion stock deal to acquire key parts of Fox would create an unprecedented entertainment colossus and could trigger antitrust concerns because it would erase one of the six major Hollywood studios and would fortify Disney’s dominance in sports broadcasting.
Indeed, the companies’ agreement calls for Disney to pay a lofty $2.5-billion breakup fee to 21st Century Fox if the merger is blocked by federal regulators on grounds “relating to antitrust laws or communications laws.”<<
>>“Will it reduce options for consumers or increase prices?” Del Vecchio said. “Will it give Disney undue power? Power not only in terms of consumer choices and prices, but power for the back-end of their business — theater owners etc.”
The deal quickly drew opposition from some critics, including the Writers Guild of America West, the union that represents writers of movies, TV and other media.
“The antitrust concerns raised by this deal are obvious and significant” by “substantially increasing the market power of a combined Disney-Fox corporation,” the union said. The union added that it would “work to ensure our nation’s antitrust laws are enforced.”<<
I want an "All About Eve" dark ride, just so during the loading spiel we get to hear "fasten your seatbelts. It's going to be a bumpy ride."
I could be guessing, but to him there's probably still some panache that goes along with the "Disney" brand name. People might have heard about something and gone "huh, I'm not sure about that", but now they'll hear "its OK, it's Disney!"Why is he acting like he created rich, diverse entertainment experiences? These experiences already existed. What difference does it make to the average person who owns them?
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