Disney to give Pixar's Lasseter 'greenlight' power

speck76

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney to give Pixar's Lasseter 'greenlight' power

Alex Armitage | Bloomberg News
Posted January 27, 2006

Pixar's John Lasseter, creator of the Toy Story movies, will have authority to approve production of animated films at Walt Disney Co. after Disney completes its $7.4 billion purchase of Pixar this year.

Lasseter, 49, who will be chief creative officer of the combined Disney and Pixar animation studios, will have so-called "greenlight" authority, Disney said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Lasseter's decisions will be subject to approval by Disney Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger, 54.

The purchase agreement filed Thursday outlines the companies' plans to preserve Pixar's independence, which Iger this week pegged as key to continuing the studio's run of box-office successes.

The protections range from practical, such as setting up a committee to protect Pixar's culture, to symbolic, such as retaining the "Pixar" sign on the Emeryville, Calif.-based studio's front gate.

"It's imperative for us to see to it that their culture is maintained," Iger said Tuesday. "Creativity is most important, as I've been saying since I came to the job."

For the time being, at least, it appears that Disney has locked up Lasseter's services for only the next five years. In the SEC filing, Iger said Disney would pick up the animation guru's current 10-year contract, which expires in 2011. Lasseter is the only Pixar senior executive with an employment contract.

The transition committee will include Pixar Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs, 50, who joins Disney's board under the purchase announced Tuesday.

He will be joined by Lasseter, Pixar President Ed Catmull, Iger, Walt Disney Studios Chairman Richard Cook and Disney Chief Financial Officer Tom Staggs.

The group will meet once every other month at Pixar's headquarters.

Information from the Los Angeles Times, a Tribune Publishing newspaper, was used in this report.
 

HauntedPirate

Park nostalgist
Premium Member
I see good things in that article, like the Pixar culture being maintained. I would hope that Lasseter does enough in the first 12-24 months to warrant a nice, long contract extension, so we don't have to worry about him going anywhere else. :)
 

Tim G

Well-Known Member
The whole idea of the combination of these guys, scare the hell out of me...
and I'm not the only one...
 

SIR90210

New Member
DarkMeasures said:
Steve Jobs was not the founder. George Lucas was. And he sold off Pixar in the late eighties to Jobs.

Founder of Apple, not Pixar. And Corrus, why does the combination scare you?
 

AndyP

Active Member
Corrus said:

Do you have a low resolution screen or do you just love rules ? :lol: :lol:
Nice work ;) *Corrus for forum moderator*

Back to the thread....

I don't think Pixar should keep its identity totally separate, its supposed to be joining Disney, so adding a few mouse ears to the headquarters might be a nice way to integrate and not create any negativity :)
 
AndyP said:
I don't think Pixar should keep its identity totally separate, its supposed to be joining Disney, so adding a few mouse ears to the headquarters might be a nice way to integrate and not create any negativity :)

Everything from the Pixar division will be branded Disney Pixar. Everything from WDFA will be branded Disney.

Give it time and you'll eventually see the "Pixar" drop off of things. Eventually, give it years, the Pixar name will fade away.

Check back on this thread in 5, 10, 20 years... You'll see. ;)
 

AndyP

Active Member
ThreeCircles said:
Everything from the Pixar division will be branded Disney Pixar. Everything from WDFA will be branded Disney.

Give it time and you'll eventually see the "Pixar" drop off of things. Eventually, give it years, the Pixar name will fade away.

Check back on this thread in 5, 10, 20 years... You'll see. ;)

Branding it Disney Pixar is the best thing to do imho, otherwise Pixar might as well run as normal and give its profits to Disney, however, I don't actually think this is to far from the truth at the moment. It will be interesting to see how things progress, but I do think it will be an excellent new partnership in Disney.
 

DarkMeasures

New Member
ThreeCircles said:
Everything from the Pixar division will be branded Disney Pixar. Everything from WDFA will be branded Disney.

Give it time and you'll eventually see the "Pixar" drop off of things. Eventually, give it years, the Pixar name will fade away.

Check back on this thread in 5, 10, 20 years... You'll see. ;)

And yet the Touchstone, Miramax, and ABC names are still used.
 
DarkMeasures said:
And yet the Touchstone, Miramax, and ABC names are still used.

True. But neither are as central and connected to the core business as animation. In fact, Touchstone was formed because Disney wanted to release more adult oriented productions without associating them with the Disney name. This is also true to a large extent with Miramax. They were originally purchased to act as the low-budget artistic production arm of Disney.

ABC? Well, that's just a whole different bag of beans.

The Disney name is all about animation. Even though the company now encompasses such far-flung activities as book publishing and radio.

It's just my thoughts but I'd wager a good sum that the Pixar name won't be around in 10, 15 years.
 

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