News The Walt Disney Company Board of Directors Extends Robert A. Iger’s Contract as CEO Through 2026

Tha Realest

Well-Known Member
Cuts which all happened under the previous CEO.

Look at the pattern - 2015-2020 - significant expansion at WDW. 2020-2022 - cuts with a different CEO, cancellations, no new development announced.

Just a little over a year after Iger returned as CEO, it looks like they are starting significant expansion again.
Isn’t there supposed to be a new CEO soon? Why should we have any confidence that new person won’t change what’s soon to be announced?
 

Nubs70

Well-Known Member
But what he's saying is not that he wants to get on the board to make sure Iger lavishes all that money on the parks. What he's saying is that he wants to use his position to more strictly evaluate the return on investment of those plans, ie. are they worth doing for the amount of extra money they will bring in.

So, far from being a voice in favour of opening the spigot and letting the dollars flow toward the parks, he is promising to take a step back and re-evaluate all the promised investments which is far more likely to lead to the delays and cancellations everyone is complaining about.
I am under presumption Bob's plan encompasses more than the parks (if not, Bob should br thrown our yesterday).

I bet there is some pretty substantial dead weight within $DIS that needs to go. Neither Nelson nor Bob would be doing their job if they didn't cut dead weight.
 

Casper Gutman

Well-Known Member
Hey, here's a fun quotation from a November Business Insider article:

"Perlmutter has told people he wants to break up Disney as much as he can and gain control of some of the IP, and "people underestimate Ike at their peril," said a source familiar with Perlmutter's conversations."

But sure, a Perlmutter victory will certainly mean more investment in the park and a flourishing of creativity at the studios.
 

Tha Realest

Well-Known Member
Hey, here's a fun quotation from a November Business Insider article:

"Perlmutter has told people he wants to break up Disney as much as he can and gain control of some of the IP, and "people underestimate Ike at their peril," said a source familiar with Perlmutter's conversations."

But sure, a Perlmutter victory will certainly mean more investment in the park and a flourishing of creativity at the studios.
News broke late last night, but apparently CalPERS went all in with their shares in supporting Peltz and Rasulo.

CalPERS.
 

Tha Realest

Well-Known Member
Hey, here's a fun quotation from a November Business Insider article:

"Perlmutter has told people he wants to break up Disney as much as he can and gain control of some of the IP, and "people underestimate Ike at their peril," said a source familiar with Perlmutter's conversations."

But sure, a Perlmutter victory will certainly mean more investment in the park and a flourishing of creativity at the studios.
Incidentally, you’ve said elsewhere Universal gets most (all?) of your theme park dollars.

If you care so much about the parks as you constantly claim, why do you no longer go to them?
 

JoeCamel

Well-Known Member
I am under presumption Bob's plan encompasses more than the parks (if not, Bob should br thrown our yesterday).

I bet there is some pretty substantial dead weight within $DIS that needs to go. Neither Nelson nor Bob would be doing their job if they didn't cut dead weight.
Bob just cut 7000 souls of "dead weight".......
 

Casper Gutman

Well-Known Member
News broke late last night, but apparently CalPERS went all in with their shares in supporting Peltz and Rasulo.

CalPERS.
Read the thread.

Why don’t I go to the park? Because the prices are too high and Genie and other new systems are not conducive to the way I like to spend my time. I still go for a day or two each year.

I’m not stupid enough to think Peltz will improve that or cruel or petty enough to want to burn Disney down out of spite. I understand things can get exponentially worse. I am intimately familiar with the history of the industry and of Peltz and Perlmutter and men like them. I have tremendous respect for Disney as a cultural institution.

Given Wall Streets current, short-sighted idiocy and the instability in the entertainment industry, I always felt a predator like Peltz had the upper hand. A lot of people who thought they were being cute by playing with fire are going to get burned.
 

Lilofan

Well-Known Member
Offering Cedar Fair as a favorable contrast to Disney is an absolute riot.

Dollywood is wonderful, but that's because of Dolly - its not a situation that can be reproduced. As much as I love it, that park's additions are much, much less costly in times of cash and time then anything at Disney.
Cedar Point that is closed several months of the year annually ? That's a lot of opportunity to address theming , cleaning , operation preventative maintenance etc.
 

Jrb1979

Well-Known Member
Cedar Point that is closed several months of the year annually ? That's a lot of opportunity to address theming , cleaning , operation preventative maintenance etc.
They will never be on the level of Disney or Universal but they are doing more theming of rides now. Cleaning, maintenance etc they do very well. If you actually went to the park you would know
 

Lilofan

Well-Known Member
They will never be on the level of Disney or Universal but they are doing more theming of rides now. Cleaning, maintenance etc they do very well. If you actually went to the park you would know
No desire to visit Ohio and Cedar Point. True , Six Flags will never be on the level with Disney.
 

Casper Gutman

Well-Known Member
No desire to visit Ohio and Cedar Point.
I love regional parks but Cedar Point is just… fine. Great if you love coasters. No dark rides. Lotta concrete.

Dollywood, Knotts, Knobels, Kennywood, Gilroy Gardens, Hershey - parks like that offer something special. Cedar Fair and Six Flags less so.

Ohio does have cool stuff elsewhere, however.
 

Jrb1979

Well-Known Member
I love regional parks but Cedar Point is just… fine. Great if you love coasters. No dark rides. Lotta concrete.

Dollywood, Knotts, Knobels, Kennywood, Gilroy Gardens, Hershey - parks like that offer something special. Cedar Fair and Six Flags less so.

Ohio does have cool stuff elsewhere, however.
Don't worry Disney is heading in that direction once Peltz gets on the board. Knotts is owned by Cedar Fair. Cedar Point does have some good themed areas. Like Frontier Town.
 

WoundedDreamer

Well-Known Member
I'm sure there are business units that need to be spun off.
Dumping linear channels or at least bringing in a partner sounds like a great idea. ESPN is the asset (as I mentioned) that simply terrifies me. Iger had a few months where he waffled on selling or spinning off linear channels and Hulu. At the end of the day, he doubled down on both with the sports streaming service and the acquisition of the remaining portion of Hulu. Streamlining the business makes sense to me. Focus on the two core assets, movie studios and theme parks. The theme parks give Disney the heft to remain a credible independent studio.
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
A lot of people here are going to lose something they love and a few will get a bit of sick pleasure.
Seriously? Have you not seen the cesspool of hot sewage that $DIS has become under Iger-Chapek-Iger2?

Domestic Parks - worse
Studios - worse
Public Perception - worse
Linear TV - worse
Sports - worse
Streaming - likely break even or slightly profitable - but only through cost cutting and savings from the strikes - but still no where near the panacea of profit promised a decade ago, and it will take a long, long, long time to recoup the billions already spent on it.
 
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