Did Anyone Else Read Re Roy Disney Retirement and His Call for Eisner to Step Down?

Seahunt

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This might have been posted elsewhere, but did anyone else read about this anywhere, and can provide a link? This was just posted on the Drudge Report, and says more will follow:

Walt Disney Co. Vice Chairman Roy E. Disney submitted his resignation from the company board on Sunday and called for Disney Chairman and CEO Michael Eisner to step down from his own positions, the WALL STREET JOURNAL is reporting.

Disney, nephew to the late Walt Disney, sent Eisner a three-page letter severely criticizing his leadership during the past seven years:

'It is my sincere belief that it is you who should be leaving and not me,... Accordingly, I once again call for your resignation or retirement'...
 
Anything would be interested if anyone could confirm or provide a link to story.::yes:: :wave2:
 
Here's a little additional info from Drudge:

Walt Disney Co. Vice Chairman Roy E. Disney submitted his resignation from the company board on Sunday and called for Disney Chairman and CEO Michael Eisner to step down from his own positions, the WALL STREET JOURNAL is reporting.

Disney, nephew to the late Walt Disney, sent Eisner a three-page letter severely criticizing his leadership during the past seven years:

'It is my sincere belief that it is you who should be leaving and not me,... Accordingly, I once again call for your resignation or retirement.'

WSJ reporter Bruce Orwall writes that in his letter Disney said that Eisner deserved credit for a successful first decade after taking the helm at Disney in 1984. But he then detailed seven areas in which he said Mr. Eisner has failed the company in the past seven years.

The list of complaints included everything from the performance of the struggling ABC broadcast networks and Disney theme parks to Mr. Eisner's reputation for "micro-management of everyone around you."

The resignation comes in advance of a Disney board meeting this week. Mr. Disney's letter seems to indicate that the Disney board's nominating committee had decided to leave his name off the slate of directors to be elected for the coming year. Mr. Disney also indicated that he would also resign from his position as chairman of Disney feature animation.

A Disney spokeswoman initially declined to comment.
 

Also the Wall Street Journal website says the retirement letter is posted there, but you have to be a subscriber to log in and view, and I am not. Maybe someone on the board is a subscriber and can get in and tell us what it said?
 
believing this.

First of all Roy Disney is still a stockholder and this type of announcement with all the acrimony and accusations will only hurt the stock price causing him to lose money. I realize he has sold some of his holdings but has retained voting and profitability rights for, I think, five years. That is not discounting the impact of his leaving a company that bears his family name.

Secondly, he doesn't impress me as the type of person who would go out this way. This makes him sound childish, petty and classless even if the sentiments he's expressed are extremely accurate.

Even with WSJ and Drudge reporting this it feels like a hoax. I guess I need to hear it from him directly. JMO, I could be way wrong.
 
I had DH check out the letter from the Wall Street Journal online. I've typed a copy for you. There may be a few mistakes, but I think it's pretty accurate.

_____________________________________

Dear Michael,

It is with deep sadness and regret that I send you this letter of resignation from the Walt Disney Company, both as Chairman of the Feature Animation Division and as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors.

You wel know that you and I have had serious differences of opinion about the direction and style of management in the Company in recent years. For whatever reason, you have driven a wedge between me and those I work with even to the extent of requiring some of my associates to report my conversations and activities back to you. I find this intolerable.

Finally, you discussed with the Nominating Committee of the Board of Directors its decision to leave my name off the slate of directors to be elected in the coming year, effectively muzzling my voice on the Board -- much as you did with Andrea Van de Kamp last year.

Michael, I believe your conduct has resulted from my clear and unambiguous statements to you and to the Board of Directors that after 19 years at the helm you are no longer the best person to run the Walt Disney Company. You had a very successful first 10-plus years at the Company in partnership with Frank Wells, for which I salute you. But, since Frank's untimely death in 1994, the Company has lost its focus, its creative energy, and its heritage.

As I have said, and as Stanley Gold has documented in letters to you and other members of the Board, this Company, under your leadership has failed during the last seven years in many ways:

1. The failure to bring back ABC Prime Time from the ratings abyss it has been in for years and your inability to program successfully the ABC Family Channel. Both of these failures have had, and I believe will continue to have, significant adverse impact on shareholder value.

2. Your consistent micro-management of everyone around you with the resulting loss of morale throughout this Company.

3. The timidity of your investments in our theme park business. At Disney's California Adventure, Paris, and now in Hong Kong, you have tried to build parks "on the cheap" and they show it and the attendance figures reflect it.

4. The perception by all of our stakeholders -- consumers, investors, employees, distributors and suppliers -- that the Company is rapacious, soul-less, and always looking for the "quick buck" rather than long-term value which is leading to a loss of public trust.

5. The creative brain drain of the last several years, which is real and continuing, and damages our Company with the loss of every talented employee.

6. Your failure to establish and build constructive relationships with creative partners, especially Pixar, Miramax, and the cable companies distributing our products.

7. Your consistent refusal to establish a clear succession plan.

In conclusion, Michael, it is my sincere belief that it is you who should be leaving and not me. Accordingly, I once again call for your resignation or retirement. The Walt Disney Company deserves fresh, energetic leadership at this challenging time in its history just as it did in 1984 when I headed a restructuring which resulted in your recruitment to the Company.

I have and will always have an enormous allegiance and respect for this Company, founded by my uncle, Walt, and father, Roy, and to our faithful employees and loyal stockholders. I don't know if you and other directors can comprehend how painful it is for me and the extended Disney family to arrive at this decision.

In accordance with Item 6 of Form 8-K, and Item 7 of Schedule 14A, I request that you disclose this letter and that you file a copy of this letter as an exhibit to a Company Form 8-K.

With sincere regret,

[signature]

cc: Board of Directors
 
It's real. The question of motive is up for interpretation. The Orlando Sentinel seems to think it's because he was being taken off due to be over the age of retirement on the board and he is retaliating. www.orlandosentinel.com
 
I doubt that he has the power to do so or I'm sure it would've been done by now.

I've always said that Walt is revolving in his grave if he had one CLUE as to how Eisner was runnng the company he started.

It's sure sad it ended for Roy this way but business is business and Disney is a business whether we choose to realize it or not.
 
Wow, those accusations seem to ring pretty true. It must be bad for a Disney to back out of the family business. Does anyone know how Eisner has reacted to this?? If he was smart he would have responded publically already... what he needs is some immediate damage control!! (Or a resignation... whatever seems most appropriate).
 
I hope Eisner takes this to heart and resigns. Obviously, I have no clue what is actually happening there, but it's awfully hard to disagree with what Disney wrote as most of it is visible to the public.

I find it odd that the rest of the board doesn't seem to see it the same way that Disney does, or they would have gotten rid of Eisner a while ago.
 
Good Morning America ( A Disney Company) stated that he was retiring due to mandatory retirement age at Disney.

A really good book to read is "Michael Eisner's story ..it is a red book and it has a sub title like "the man behind the ears.".something..anyway..he is kinda a tyrant...Very good book and I couldn't put it down!
 
I think Michael Eisner's resignation is definitely called for.
 

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