News Disney CEO Bob Chapek hails the metaverse as 'the next great storytelling frontier' and sets up a new team at Disney to create new experiences

CaptainAmerica

Premium Member
You keep saying this, but are not adding any other details.
I'm not a journalist and I don't pretend to be, it's not my job to get the story straight.

Chapek used the word "metaverse" in a February 9, 2022 interview on CNBC's Closing Bell. From that point forward, he clarified multiple times that he misspoke when using the word and that "metaverse" was an inaccurate term for what they were working on.

When Disney hired an Apple executive to be a VP in this area, Variety reported "According to Disney, because the term “metaverse” means different things to different people, the company under White’s lead has coalesced efforts under the Next Generation Storytelling banner and defined a strategy focused on creating “new canvases for storytelling and audience engagement” spanning digital, physical and virtual experiences."

In an interview on September 15, 2020, Chapek had the following exchange with David Faber (the context here was sports in particular).

CHAPEK: We’re hard at work in our offices, both on the East Coast and the West Coast, figuring out how we make a more friction free sports environment for our, our viewers. And obviously, some of these things take the cooperation of a lot of the people in the ecosystem, whether they be the leagues, whether they be other broadcast partners, but we foresee a world where ESPN, even more than ever, is the pinnacle of all your broadcast needs and we’re excited to continue working on that and at some point, when we’re all fully baked, we’ll come and—

FABER: When do you think that’ll be? When do you think that’ll be at some point? I mean, how long do you wait until we sort of have a real sense of what the plan is?

CHAPEK: Yeah. Well, we don’t have an exact timetable right now because it depends how fast these things evolve. But we’re really pleased with some of the conversations that we’ve had throughout the industry in terms of what’s the future of sports and how do we have a step function in the consumer experience so that it’s not just sort of your father’s old sports experience, but something that’s bigger and greater. You know, we talk about next gen storytelling, we talk about sports betting, we talk about things like Peyton and Eli those curated, custom, customized ways to experience sports and it’s all about how do you use technology, not for technology at sake, but to advance the storytelling, advance the integration so that instead of it being a lean back experience, it’s a lean forward experience where you’re integrated and you’re involved in the way that you want to be whether it’s got to do with fantasy sports, sports, betting, or whatever else is on the horizon.

FABER: Right, so I mean, maybe we’re in the metaverse here to somehow with with, I don’t know in the middle of a football game.

CHAPEK: Well, that essentially is what we’re referring to when we talk next gen storytelling. Typically we don’t use the metaverse name for it because we believe that we’ve got a unique take on it as a Walt Disney Company. But that is exactly what it is. It’s that seamless integration of being able to not only consume the game, but actually impact your version of the game whatever that is.

FABER: But you feel confident that these ideas which are not fully formed as yet but you’re clearly working on will sort of create a new growth trajectory for a great cash flow producing asset but one obviously that well, you said it’s part of the melting ice cube that’s cable.

CHAPEK: And we certainly know the tailwinds that we have, you know, with these new ideas so we feel confident in them. But we also know that there’s headwinds in terms of that melting ice cube of the cable universe and we believe that, you know, ESPN can become something as great as it’s ever been and more than we ever conceived of.


"Metaverse" is a nebulous term that makes people think of Mark Zuckerberg's digital avatar sitting around a conference table with Jim Cramer. This was never that, and was never anything like that.
 

wdwmagic

Administrator
Moderator
Premium Member
Original Poster
I'm not a journalist and I don't pretend to be, it's not my job to get the story straight.

Chapek used the word "metaverse" in a February 9, 2022 interview on CNBC's Closing Bell. From that point forward, he clarified multiple times that he misspoke when using the word and that "metaverse" was an inaccurate term for what they were working on.

When Disney hired an Apple executive to be a VP in this area, Variety reported "According to Disney, because the term “metaverse” means different things to different people, the company under White’s lead has coalesced efforts under the Next Generation Storytelling banner and defined a strategy focused on creating “new canvases for storytelling and audience engagement” spanning digital, physical and virtual experiences."

In an interview on September 15, 2020, Chapek had the following exchange with David Faber (the context here was sports in particular).

CHAPEK: We’re hard at work in our offices, both on the East Coast and the West Coast, figuring out how we make a more friction free sports environment for our, our viewers. And obviously, some of these things take the cooperation of a lot of the people in the ecosystem, whether they be the leagues, whether they be other broadcast partners, but we foresee a world where ESPN, even more than ever, is the pinnacle of all your broadcast needs and we’re excited to continue working on that and at some point, when we’re all fully baked, we’ll come and—

FABER: When do you think that’ll be? When do you think that’ll be at some point? I mean, how long do you wait until we sort of have a real sense of what the plan is?

CHAPEK: Yeah. Well, we don’t have an exact timetable right now because it depends how fast these things evolve. But we’re really pleased with some of the conversations that we’ve had throughout the industry in terms of what’s the future of sports and how do we have a step function in the consumer experience so that it’s not just sort of your father’s old sports experience, but something that’s bigger and greater. You know, we talk about next gen storytelling, we talk about sports betting, we talk about things like Peyton and Eli those curated, custom, customized ways to experience sports and it’s all about how do you use technology, not for technology at sake, but to advance the storytelling, advance the integration so that instead of it being a lean back experience, it’s a lean forward experience where you’re integrated and you’re involved in the way that you want to be whether it’s got to do with fantasy sports, sports, betting, or whatever else is on the horizon.

FABER: Right, so I mean, maybe we’re in the metaverse here to somehow with with, I don’t know in the middle of a football game.

CHAPEK: Well, that essentially is what we’re referring to when we talk next gen storytelling. Typically we don’t use the metaverse name for it because we believe that we’ve got a unique take on it as a Walt Disney Company. But that is exactly what it is. It’s that seamless integration of being able to not only consume the game, but actually impact your version of the game whatever that is.

FABER: But you feel confident that these ideas which are not fully formed as yet but you’re clearly working on will sort of create a new growth trajectory for a great cash flow producing asset but one obviously that well, you said it’s part of the melting ice cube that’s cable.

CHAPEK: And we certainly know the tailwinds that we have, you know, with these new ideas so we feel confident in them. But we also know that there’s headwinds in terms of that melting ice cube of the cable universe and we believe that, you know, ESPN can become something as great as it’s ever been and more than we ever conceived of.


"Metaverse" is a nebulous term that makes people think of Mark Zuckerberg's digital avatar sitting around a conference table with Jim Cramer. This was never that, and was never anything like that.
That reads to me as Chapek just trying to differentiate Disney's product from Facebook. But in essence, he believes it to be a very similar thing. I don't see how any of this though makes reports of abandoning these plans to be fake news.
 

CaptainAmerica

Premium Member
That reads to me as Chapek just trying to differentiate Disney's product from Facebook. But in essence, he believes it to be a very similar thing. I don't see how any of this though makes reports of abandoning these plans to be fake news.
It's a timeline issue.

In late 2021, "metaverse" was a nebulous term that wasn't really defined, so Chapek used it casually to refer to these ideas about blending physical and digital experiences, future mediums for storytelling, etc. As the months went by and Facebook claimed the space (and the term), "metaverse" came to mean "a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets," which is what the term means in common parlance today, in 2023.

So when people write "Disney has abandoned their metaverse plans," people read that as "Disney has abandoned their plans to build a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets." But Disney was never building a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets. They were building a thing that may have fit the 2021 loosey-goosey definition of "metaverse," but they were never building anything that resembles the 2023 definition of "metaverse."

When Chapek said "metaverse," "metaverse" didn't mean anything. Once it came to have a concrete definition, the rug was pulled out from under him and he had to go back and clarify "wait, no, not that... that's not what we're doing."

Yes, the reporting that this group has been let go as part of the first wave of 2023 layoffs is accurate.
 

GimpYancIent

Well-Known Member
The axe wielding B.I. (yeah, Mr. grow it big himself) is working at trimming away the dead wood. Streamlining is the appropriate corporate term. Marketing could use some trimming!
 

TomboyJanet

Well-Known Member
They continually use the word "storytelling" but I don't think they know what that even means anymore. It's become just another buzzword thrown about because it sounds good and "Disney-ish".
It's what they said they were going to retheme Spaceship earth to make moana grandma spaceship earth. come to think of it disney loves to oversaturate with certain ips. There were SOOO many star wars things in 2016 Disneyland. Moana in Epcot Moana in DAK......Toy Story all over..... Walt didn't make all the Fantasyland dark rides themed to Snow White. It's just wasting space. So many other things can be made. How bout a Tangled ride? Robin Hood? Tarzan? (I miss Tarzan Rocks he's a hunk!)
1680106710724.png

YOW!
 

Rteetz

Well-Known Member
It's a timeline issue.

In late 2021, "metaverse" was a nebulous term that wasn't really defined, so Chapek used it casually to refer to these ideas about blending physical and digital experiences, future mediums for storytelling, etc. As the months went by and Facebook claimed the space (and the term), "metaverse" came to mean "a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets," which is what the term means in common parlance today, in 2023.

So when people write "Disney has abandoned their metaverse plans," people read that as "Disney has abandoned their plans to build a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets." But Disney was never building a video-game-esque digital environment where people interact using virtual reality headsets. They were building a thing that may have fit the 2021 loosey-goosey definition of "metaverse," but they were never building anything that resembles the 2023 definition of "metaverse."

When Chapek said "metaverse," "metaverse" didn't mean anything. Once it came to have a concrete definition, the rug was pulled out from under him and he had to go back and clarify "wait, no, not that... that's not what we're doing."

Yes, the reporting that this group has been let go as part of the first wave of 2023 layoffs is accurate.
I mean who really cares? Metaverse, next gen storytelling, blah blah blah it’s all in that same realm. The general public doesn’t give a rats butt what you call it.
 

Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
disney loves to oversaturate with certain ips. There were SOOO many star wars things in 2016 Disneyland. Moana in Epcot Moana in DAK......Toy Story all over..... Walt didn't make all the Fantasyland dark rides themed to Snow White. It's just wasting space. So many other things can be made. How bout a Tangled ride? Robin Hood? Tarzan?
Word. It's not just that all new attractions need to be IP-based, they have to be based on IPs that are popular right now.

Was this even a problem in the 1990s and the 2000s?
 

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