As a critic of Disney management, I must say that the Company deserves praise for its long-standing position on LGBT discrimination. In-house and in public, they're strongly against it. And it's no PR posturing -- they take action to back up their words, including risking the economic ire of certain demographics.
LA Times Op-Ed: Kudos to Disney for taking on LGBT discrimination in Georgia
The Walt Disney Co. this week joined a growing chorus of businesses urging Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal to veto a bill that would sanction discrimination against gays and lesbians. But Disney went a step further, warning that it would stop film production in the state if the bill is signed into law. That's a serious risk to Georgia, a state that has spent years trying to build a film and television production business through generous tax credits.
Disney's leadership is commendable and its threat is powerful. The world's largest entertainment company, Disney (along with its subsidiary, Marvel Studio) has shot numerous big-budget films in the state. One Disney production alone — “Ant Man” — spent an estimated $106 million in Georgia and employed 3,579 residents. It is right that Disney should speak up on behalf of its LGBT employees and their families, many of whom may have to relocate to Georgia or work on location there for months at time, and who shouldn't have to fear discrimination. State officials in Georgia are eager to lure more lucrative film and TV productions; Deal even visited Los Angeles last year to pitch Georgia's tax credit program. But Disney's potential boycott, along with criticism from the Motion Picture Assn. of America and other major entertainment companies, should be a signal that Georgia needs to do more than offer financial incentives — it needs to safeguard the rights of LGBT people....