DIS Shareholders and Stock Info ONLY

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...mazon-prime-video-ad-tier-lawsuit-1235822779/

Amazon Prime Video Ad Tier Sparks Class Action Lawsuit From Subscribers
The lawsuit takes aim at the ecommerce giant turning on ads for Prime Video users and charging them an additional fee for its ad-free tier.

by Winston Cho
February 12, 2024 11:34am

Amazon is facing a lawsuit accusing it of misleading Prime subscribers by charging them an additional fee to stream movies and TV shows without ads.

A proposed class action lawsuit, filed Friday in California federal court, claims breach of contract and violations of state consumer protection laws on behalf of users who saw the terms of their subscriptions with Amazon change when it pivoted to making its ad tier the default for its over 100 million subscribers.

In 2023, Amazon, which declined to comment, announced plans to turn on ads for all Prime Video viewers. The platform last month rolled out the change, instantly turning the service into a streaming-ad juggernaut and the largest ad-supported subscription streamer. Users must pay an additional $2.99 per month to watch without ads.

But when Amazon altered its terms, users who had signed up for annual subscriptions were also impacted. They allege the change is deceptive.

“Subscribers must now pay extra to get something they already paid for,” the complaint states.

In addition to being “unfair,” the suit alleges that Amazon illegally benefited by advertising Prime Video as “commercial-free” for years prior to launching its ad-supported tier, which “harms both consumers and honest competition,” according to the complaint.

The proposed class action seeks at least $5 million and a court order barring Amazon from engaging in further deceptive conduct on behalf of users who subscribed to Prime prior to Dec. 28, 2023. It brings claims for breach of contract, false advertising and unfair competition, among other alleged violations of consumer protection laws in California and Washington.

Last year, the Federal Trade Commission sued the tech giant for allegedly duping consumers into signing up for its Prime service and then impeding them from canceling their subscriptions. The suit argued Amazon employs a “manipulative” and “coercive” interface to trick users into enrolling in automatically renewing subscriptions. It also alleged that many subscribers intended to sign up solely for Prime Video, which is a lower-cost option.

Prime is considered a vital part of Amazon’s retail dominance because it keeps users locked into the company’s marketplace by offering them perks, including access to Prime Video, according to the FTC.

Amazon was also sued in 2020 for unfair competition and false advertising over the company reserving the right to end consumers’ access to content purchased through Prime Video. A federal judge in 2022 dismissed the proposed class action, siding with Amazon on arguments that its terms of use tell users that movies and TV shows they purchased may become unavailable due to provider licensing restrictions.
 
https://deadline.com/2024/02/paramount-global-national-amusements-apollo-1235822978/

Apollo Distancing Orbit From National Amusements Buyout As The Pursuit Of Paramount Global Continues – The Dish

By Anthony D'Alessandro, Jill Goldsmith
February 12, 2024 - 12:44pm PST

EXCLUSIVE: We are hearing that Apollo Global Management, which was mulling an offer for National Amusements, the Redstone family company that controls Paramount Global, is no longer considering the move.

Reps for Apollo Global Management, Paramount Global and National Amusements declined to comment.

While the situation is still fluid and it may be early to count Apollo out of the process entirely, sources tell us that the Marc Rowan-Josh Harris-Leon Black co-founded private equity company is skittish in the wake of the FCC blowing up hedge fund Standard General’s attempted $8.6 billion bid for the Tegna station group — a deal that Apollo Global Management was set to provide funding toward. The deal was inked in 2022 and fell apart in May of 2023.

Apollo is also an investor in Dune movie studio Legendary Entertainment.

“Capital is not the issue, approval is the commodity; very few people can get FCC approval,” a person with knowledge of the Paramount Global pursuit told Deadline. Meaning regulatory concerns, not access to capital, are the key consideration on who takes over Paramount Global or National Amusements.

“The FCC doesn’t want hedge fund operators going near local TV stations after what they did to newspapers,” the person added.

Bloomberg reported on Jan. 20 that Apollo reached out to BDT & MSD Partners, the investment bank advising the Redstones.

Still in the mix are David Ellison, who is looking to merge his Skydance Media with Paramount. He has eyes primarily for the film studio, and has deep-pocketed backers like his father, billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and RedBird Capital.

Byron Allen went public last several weeks ago with a $30 billion offer (including equity and outstanding debt) for Paramount Global. He’s interested in keeping the broadcast assets, linear networks, and, potentially, Paramount+, with the Paramount film studio and real estate unloaded.

The Redstone family, led by Shari Redstone, controls 77% of the voting stock in Paramount, the parent of CBS, MTV and other film and TV properties. CBS just aired, and Paramount+ streamed, Super Bowl LVIII which saw the Kansas City Chiefs topple the San Francisco 49ers.

Following Allen’s bid at the end of January, Deadline heard that a special board committee was formed to evaluate any potential bids for Paramount Global and to provide an extra layer of scrutinity. Shari Redstone, non-executive chair of the company and head of its controlling shareholder National Amusements, is not a member of such special committee.

Paramount has a dual-class ownership structure. The Redstone family trust, National Amusements, controls nearly 80% of the Class A voting stock, mean any interested buyer who didn’t want Shari looking over their shoulder would need to acquire the NAI stake as well as publicly-traded Paramount.

Just acquiring NAI’s controlling interest would irk off minority shareholders and could result in legal fights if a buyer forced a deal or merger. Warren Buffett owns about 15% of the company.
Allen’s offer in fact is two-tiered — he’s proposing $28.58 each for the voting shares of Paramount, and $21.53 for the non-voting shares.
 

https://www.latimes.com/entertainme...enure-is-looking-brighter-after-a-rough-start

Why Bob Iger’s second act at Disney is looking brighter after a rough start

By Meg James, Christi Carras
Feb. 13, 2024 - 3:00 AM PST

After a bruising year of Hollywood strikes, wrenching job cuts and stock setbacks, Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger finally is racking up some wins.

While delivering stronger-than-expected earnings last week, Iger made several announcements designed to keep the Burbank giant firmly ensconced in pop culture: ESPN will anchor a new sports streaming service launching next fall. Disney+ will be the streaming home for Taylor Swift’s concert tour movie. And Captain America and Baby Yoda could soon infiltrate the hit online game “Fortnite,” thanks to Disney paying $1.5 billion for a minority stake in Epic Games.

Investors who’ve been fretting over Disney’s troubles are beginning to see some relief. The company’s stock is up 20% since the start of the year. Disney had its best day since 2021 on Wall Street following the earnings report. On Monday, shares gained nearly 1% to $109.29.

The strong showing could help thwart activist investor Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management and a second shareholder, Blackwells Capital Group, which both are trying to stage a boardroom shakeup at Disney’s annual shareholder meeting April 3.

“Whatever chance of success these activist investors had is being buried by 100,000 tons of Disney carbonite,” TD Cowen media analyst Doug Creutz said in an interview after the earnings. “The market likes what it sees.”

On Monday, Disney sent a letter to shareholders touting the “significant steps Disney is taking as it successfully executes a strategic transformation of the Company.”

However, analysts said Iger still has his work cut out to get the Mouse House back in order.

“They aren’t out of the woods yet,” Creutz said. “The question is: Will they be able to show sustained growth on the entertainment and sports side of the business?”

Still, Disney is demonstrating that, among Hollywood’s legacy film and TV studios, it appears well positioned to weather the disruption wrought by the shift to streaming.

Traditional rivals — including Paramount Global and Warner Bros. Discovery — have been struggling to maintain their standing in the wake of Netflix’s takeover of the television industry and the arrival of global behemoths Apple and Amazon into the streaming arena.

Disney’s stock rebound had more to do with business fundamentals than Iger’s announced initiatives, including teaming up with Fox Corp. and Warner Bros. Discovery to introduce a new streaming service with more than a dozen sports-centric legacy cable channels, ESPN and TNT, among others, analysts said.

Iger’s yearlong cost-cutting efforts — including eliminating 8,000 positions — drove the stronger earnings.

Financial losses in the streaming service businesses shrank to $216 million during the most recent quarter from losing more than $1 billion during the same period a year prior. Disney reiterated that its streaming business would show profits by September.

“Looking at our results this quarter, we can say with confidence our strategy is working,” Iger said during last week’s first-quarter earnings call.

Disney also revealed that it has secured the streaming rights to an extended version of Swift’s Eras tour concert movie, which will debut March 15 on Disney+. That should help to plug gaps in the company’s programming release pipeline, brought in large part by last year’s writers’ and actors’ strikes. Disney+ has 111 million subscribers worldwide (down slightly from the previous quarter).

But the strength came from Disney’s workhorses: the vaunted theme parks, cruise line and consumer products division, which generated a record profit of $9.1 billion in the quarter, thanks in part to improving economic conditions. The division’s operating income increased 8% to $3.1 billion. International parks, including those in Shanghai and Hong Kong, and the Disney Cruise Line, led the way. Domestic parks, which have raised prices, posted slightly lower results.

Chief Financial Officer Hugh Johnston, who joined the company in November from PepsiCo, and Iger pleased Wall Street with news that the company planned to spend $3 billion repurchasing shares.

“It finally feels like the company has some financial control, in a way that Disney hasn’t felt in a number of years,” Michael Nathanson of the MoffettNathanson research firm said, adding that activist shareholders are also due some credit.

Disney hopes the market’s reaction will blunt calls by Peltz and Blackwells to shake up the board.

Peltz wants to dump two board members — Michael B.G. Froman, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, and Maria Elena Lagomasino, CEO of WE Family Offices, which serves high-net-worth families — to make room for him and Jay Rasulo, a former Disney chief financial officer. Trian beneficially owns $3 billion of Disney common stock, amassed in large part by longtime Marvel Entertainment chairman Ike Perlmutter, who was ousted from Disney last year.

Blackwells, for its part, called Trian’s slate “uninspiring.” The firm wants to break up Disney, and it nominated three board candidates of its own: media veteran Jessica Schell, real estate expert Craig Hatkoff and TaskRabbit founder Leah Solivan.

Disney has called on shareholders to ignore both activist groups and support its slate of 12 board members, including Iger, during its annual meeting. The company enlisted Donald Duck’s scatterbrained cartoon uncle, Prof. Ludwig Von Drake, in a video on votedisney.com to make its case that Disney’s current board members are up to the job.

Peltz, for his part, isn’t backing down. “It’s deja vu all over again,” Peltz’s firm said in a statement. “We saw this movie last year, and we didn’t like the ending.”

Last week’s earnings gave Disney a welcomed win in the wake of a recent legal setback. A federal judge in Tallahassee, Fla., last month tossed the 1st Amendment lawsuit the company brought against its nemesis in the culture wars — Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Disney has tried to argue that DeSantis-led changes to Florida land-use laws were retaliation against the entertainment giant for publicly criticizing Florida’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law two years ago. (Disney swiftly appealed the judge’s ruling.)

Disney faces challenges on other fronts too.

The company continues to confront the ravages of audience declines in linear television, which have hammered the ABC network and longtime cash cow ESPN.

Disney is attempting to walk a fine line by preserving the lucrative pay-TV bundle while separately offering products with fewer channels to sports fans who don’t want to pay more than $100 a month.

Disney is planning to release the flagship ESPN channels directly to consumers in the fall of 2025. And this coming fall, the company will contribute its linear sports channels to the yet-unnamed streaming service that Disney will co-own with Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery. The companies haven’t announced a price point, but some analysts believe that it might top $50 a month in an attempt to draw cord-cutters and “cord-nevers.”


Of particular concern still is that Disney’s movie side has struggled, leading Iger to acknowledge late last year that the company had lost focus in the rush to crank out content for its streaming services.

“There is an overhang of poorer-performing films, but the company has said it will concentrate more on quality than quantity,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a senior associate dean of the Yale School of Management. “That focus is really important.”

The company during its earnings call announced that a sequel to “Moana” — the 2016 animated film that, according to Iger, was the most-streamed movie of 2023 in the United States — is coming to theaters in November. It was originally conceived as a series to be streamed on Disney+, but the company changed tack and decided to release the sequel as a feature in theaters. Several other Disney sequels are also on the way, following strike-related delays.

Raymond James analyst Ric Prentiss pointed to the partnership between Disney and Epic Games as another way to draw advertisers who are clamoring to reach the younger demographic.

“If you’re going to be a relevant, growing player, you better have gaming in your kickback,” Prentiss said, adding that Disney’s play is “not just to create a game, but to create an environment where people spend a lot of time.”

Improving the film slate, guiding ESPN into streaming and reducing the streaming losses are key.

“Iger’s doing well to have this stock bounce after just one year back on the job,” Sonnenfeld said. “A turnaround usually takes three years.”
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nf...p&cvid=19d6713a4c1d40149f0eeb4c16abc4fd&ei=13

The initial belief from the NFL is that Disney, Fox Corporation, and Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent companies of ESPN, Fox, and TNT Sports, are indeed well within their rights to this streaming service agreement. However, the NFL is still looking for potential loopholes to stop the service, according to Ourand.



It’s certainly interesting to see the NFL pushing back so hard against this venture. The NFL’s decision to give Amazon Prime exclusive rights to future playoff games after giving Peacock a playoff game this year further proves that they see streaming services as the future of broadcasting
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...ok-to-unionize-with-actors-equity-1235823795/

Disneyland Character Workers Look to Unionize With Actors’ Equity
Calling themselves “Magic United,” the group also includes performers in parades and hosts, trainers and other support staff for the characters.

by Caitlin Huston
February 13, 2024 - 11:10am PST

A group of 1,700 performers who play characters and cheer and dance in parades at Disneyland in California announced their intent Tuesday to unionize with Actors’ Equity.

The group, which includes performers who conduct meet and greets in the park and appear in character dining experiences, as well as the hosts and trainers that support them, are asking for increased wages, greater transparency on scheduling and rehiring decisions and addressing concerns about safe and sanitary workplace conditions.

Calling themselves “Magic United,” the group has already begun circulating union authorization cards and will aim for voluntary recognition from Disney Resort Entertainment. If that recognition is not granted, Equity will file a petition with the National Labor Relations Board with the goal of being granted an election.

Both Disneyland and Disney World in Florida already have a high amount of unionization among their workers, with Equity representing the performers in the shows at Disney World since 1990. Due to timing and varying organizing efforts, the actors who play characters at Disney World are represented by the Teamsters. The cast members who work in the characters and parades departments at Disneyland are one of the rare non-unionized groups (performers in the shows there are represented by the American Guild of Variety Artists).

Kate Shindle, president of Actors’ Equity, said talks of organizing this group began as the cast members emerged from the pandemic and were concerned about issues such as audience interaction. Some organizers then approached Actors’ Equity, which represents 51,000 stage managers and actors, primarily in theaters, who felt that they had experience dealing with similar issues.

“There are things that have been explained to me that are issues or concerns at Disneyland that sound very familiar,” Shindle said. “Making sure that costumes are cleaned between the time one person takes them off and another person puts them on is something we deal with all over the place in traditional brick and mortar theaters and outdoor theaters.”

Actors’ Equity has also expanded its organizing efforts to include planetarium lecturers and strippers at a club in Los Angeles. Shindle noted that “hundreds” of cast members at Disneyland have already signed union authorization cards.
“We chose Actors’ Equity Association as our union because we’ve seen how well they work with Disney in Florida, on Broadway and on tour. Our Walt Disney World colleagues exemplify how you can be pro-Disney and pro-union at the same time. Furthermore, the vast majority of our park colleagues here in Anaheim already have union representation. It’s a win/win: when we can speak with a collective voice, we can have a clearer, more productive conversation with our employer. Ultimately this will result in a better experience for all – Cast Members, managers and more importantly, our Guests,” the leaders of Magic United said in a statement.
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/para...bid-this-is-the-right-decision-163640740.html

Paramount lays off 800 workers in cost-cutting bid: 'This is the right decision'
Alexandra Canal · Senior Reporter
Tue, Feb 13, 2024, 10:36 AM CST

Paramount Global (PARA) will lay off hundreds of employees following a record-setting Super Bowl that garnered more than 123 million viewers across all company platforms, led by CBS.

The job cuts, which will take place Tuesday, will impact about 800 employees, or roughly 3% of Paramount's workforce, sources familiar with the matter told Yahoo Finance.

In an internal memo to employees, Paramount CEO Bob Bakish reiterated his previous comment that layoffs are necessary in order to return the company to earnings growth. "I am confident this is the right decision for our future," he wrote.

"These adjustments will help enable us to build on our momentum and execute our strategic vision for the year ahead — and I firmly believe we have much to be excited about," Bakish continued.

Shares, which are down about 13% since the start of the year, fell 4% Tuesday following the news.

Bakish warned employees job cuts would be coming in a separate internal memo sent on Jan. 25. At the time, he cited the need for Paramount to "operate as a leaner company and spend less."

The company has been bleeding money, particularly within its streaming business. Although losses have narrowed, Paramount still reported a direct-to-consumer (DTC) loss of $238 million in the third quarter.

For the nine months ended Sept. 30, the company's DTC unit lost about $1.2 billion on an adjusted operating profit basis, while its film division shed $143 million over that same time period.

On the TV side, Paramount saw adjusted operating profits drop 12% annually to $3.6 billion, burdened by a 14% slump in linear ad revenue.

Paramount ended the nine-month period with more than $15.6 billion in long-term debt and about $1.8 billion in cash.

Paramount's layoff announcement comes as M&A rumors swirl. Most recently, media mogul Byron Allen reportedly offered $14.3 billion to buy all of the company's outstanding shares.

Outside of Byron Allen, production studio Skydance Media and investment firm RedBird Capital have also expressed interest in a deal. Private equity firm Apollo Global Management, the parent company of Yahoo Finance, along with competitor Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) are also rumored as potential buyers.

Last week, Bakish told Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi that the company is open to dealmaking.

"In parallel, we are always looking at alternate ways of creating shareholder value, including potentially through transactions," the executive said. "We will have to see if anything happens in that regard."

Paramount will report its fourth quarter and full-year 2023 earnings results on Feb. 28.
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nf...p&cvid=19d6713a4c1d40149f0eeb4c16abc4fd&ei=13

The initial belief from the NFL is that Disney, Fox Corporation, and Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent companies of ESPN, Fox, and TNT Sports, are indeed well within their rights to this streaming service agreement. However, the NFL is still looking for potential loopholes to stop the service, according to Ourand.



It’s certainly interesting to see the NFL pushing back so hard against this venture. The NFL’s decision to give Amazon Prime exclusive rights to future playoff games after giving Peacock a playoff game this year further proves that they see streaming services as the future of broadcasting

The NFL wants to make sure they get their money. Their current TV contract may include streaming but not the numbers they potentially see this getting. Especially given it may finally be what let's some people cut the cord which would mean less actual TV and more streaming.
 
DIS in rare company today - one of only 3 DOW stocks in the green as of noon eastern:

https://www.cnbc.com/dow-30/

It's one of the two individual stocks I own which are up today. I'm moving a whole lot closer to break even and a gain on my DIS stock. Once upon a time I was down $400+ on the stock...now, I'm down about $47. I kept buying even at it's low to drive my price per share down. Every little bit helped me.
 
I got my voting info today as well, but has anyone successfully found how to register to attend the virtual meeting on April 3? There's a logic loop about how you have to go to the website and click "attend the meeting" to register, and when I get there it just says I have to register before April 2 to attend, without any further way to get to a registration page.
 
It's one of the two individual stocks I own which are up today. I'm moving a whole lot closer to break even and a gain on my DIS stock. Once upon a time I was down $400+ on the stock...now, I'm down about $47. I kept buying even at it's low to drive my price per share down. Every little bit helped me.
This is great to hear. Those lows were amazing opportunities.
 
https://deadline.com/2024/02/nelson-peltz-rips-disney-bob-iger-proxy-fight-1235825540/

Nelson Peltz Rips Disney’s Spree Of Earnings-Timed News As “Spaghetti Against The Wall”, Guarantees Victory In Proxy Fight

By Dade Hayes - Business Editor @dadehayes February 14, 2024 - 9:02am PST

Activist Disney investor Nelson Peltz, whose Trian Capital is at war with CEO Bob Iger, blasted the company’s spree of earning-timed announcements last week as “spaghetti against the wall.” He also guaranteed victory in the proxy fight.

“With the stock waning and Disney facing another proxy contest, Disney appears to again be trying to distract shareholders with what we see as a fanciful tale, claiming it has ‘turned the corner and entered a new era,'” Trian wrote in a letter to shareholders Wednesday. “And with that, Disney announced a slew of new promises and ideas — most still in the process of being developed — hoping that shareholders would just believe all was well and improving.”

Perhaps not coincidentally, as the Trian letter was hitting the wire, Disney announced Fantastic Four casting and release date news, with the Marvel property immediately becoming a trending topic on social media.

Trian is seeking to have Peltz and former Disney CFO Jay Rasulo elected to the company’s board of directors. Disney formally rebuffed their request to be put forward as officially sanctioned nominees, so the matter will be put to a vote at its April 3 shareholder meeting. Two other investment firms have also been rattling cages ahead of the meeting, but Trian, which has waged successful proxy battles against Procter & Gamble and other companies, has been the most vocal. Former Marvel chief Ike Perlmutter has endorsed the Trian effort and enabled it to leverage his shares in the fight.

The letter singled out one move in what it called the company’s “spaghetti-against-the-wall plan”: a $1.5 billion investment in Fortnite maker Epic Games. According to Trian, the initiative “lacks a product roadmap or expected return targets.” Similarly, it asserted that Disney’s formation of a joint sports streaming venture with Fox Corp. and Warner Bros. Discovery “likely confused consumers, surprised important content partners and competes with the company’s own services.”

In an interview on CNBC timed to the release of the letter, Peltz was asked if he would sell his shares and retreat if he ends up losing the proxy fight. “Oh, come on. We’re not going to lose, OK? Let’s get that straight,” he responded. “The people who own this stock, they want action. They don’t want promises, OK? That’s not what they want. We’re gonna win. We never plan and state what we’re going to do if we lose because we don’t lose.”

In addition to Epic and the sports streaming venture, the company announced Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concert film coming exclusively to Disney+; ESPN setting a date for its stand-alone streaming launch; and an animated sequel to Moana. All of that news, plus a solid set of financials, boosted Disney stock more than 10% the following day. It has risen 22% since the start of the year, though it remains more than 40% below its 2021 peak.

“Frenetic activity, in the face of a proxy contest, is not a substitute for a well-considered corporate strategy. Nor is throwing spaghetti at the wall going to feed shareholders who have been starved of returns for so long,” Trian’s letter concluded, adding a cartoon depicting current board members actually throwing spaghetti against the wall. “Disney shareholders need the company to consistently perform under the watchful eye of a vigilant board. That is the recipe for good eating.”
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...sneys-epic-video-games-investment-1235824308/

Disney’s Epic Deal Reignites Hollywood Love Affair With Video Games

As Bob Iger bets $1.5 billion that a ‘Fortnite’ investment can reenergize his flagship franchises, other major studios are giving a new look at gaming divisions that have become IP-centric gold mines.

by Alex Weprin
February 14, 2024 4:45am

Not long after he returned as Disney’s CEO in late 2022, Bob Iger sat down with Josh D’Amaro, Disney’s head of parks and experiences, and Sean Shoptaw, the company’s head of games, to be briefed about the media habits of young consumers.

“The first thing they showed me were the demographic trends,” Iger recalled, speaking to Wall Street analysts Feb. 7. “When I saw Gen Z and Gen Alpha and even millennials, and I saw the amount of time they were spending in terms of their total media screen time on video games, it was stunning to me, equal to what they spend on TV and movies.”

The conclusion he reached: “We have to be there, and we have to be there as soon as we possibly can in a very compelling way,” Iger added, noting that historically Disney has simply licensed its IP to outside game studios.

The “stunning” data led to Disney’s biggest bet in gaming ever: a $1.5 billion investment in Fortnite studio Epic Games, run by Tim Sweeney, and a promise to create a “games and entertainment universe” filled with Disney IP, interoperable with Fortnite, “a world where people could play games that we create, could create their own games,” Iger added. “You can imagine the creation of shortform videos, or we may even use the platform to actually distribute some of our content.”

In a world where it has become increasingly challenging to make entertainment profitable (streaming entertainment at least), many of the biggest producers of films and TV shows suddenly find themselves thinking about those Gen Z and Gen Alpha habits. Warner Bros. Discovery, the only traditional entertainment company with a meaningful in-house game studio, Warner Bros. Games, has in recent quarters spent more time touting its efforts in the space to Wall Street: “Games will be even more important to our fans in the future, and so having this asset in our arsenal is a critical differentiator and a real growth opportunity,” WBD CEO David Zaslav told analysts Nov. 8.

Netflix, the streaming leader, has spent nine figures over the past few years to acquire a handful of indie game studios, and has released dozens of titles for its members to enjoy, including original titles based on its IP, as well as acquired titles like the Grand Theft Auto trilogy, which co-CEO Greg Peters said on Jan. 24 delivered “the biggest download and engagement numbers that we’ve seen seen so far."

Even NBCUniversal owner Comcast has explored the possibility of getting into the game business, going so far as to hold talks to merge NBCU with Electronic Arts back in 2022 (those talks reportedly fell apart over valuation, but still underscore the serious interest).

Entertainment companies have had an on-again, off-again approach to video games over the years. As recently as 2022, WarnerMedia (before the Discovery merger) weighed selling its game division, and Disney shuttered or sold its in-house game divisions to focus on licensing a number of years ago. So why are big entertainment companies suddenly re-enamored with video games? Iger spelled it out: Among consumers under 30, the amount of time being spent with games is comparable to traditional film or TV. And they don’t want to cede that direct relationship. “It’s a huge opportunity, $140 billion in consumer spend,” Peters said. “Research has shown that Gen Z and Gen Alpha prefer gaming to any other form of entertainment,” Zaslav underscored in the call to analysts.

The company sold 22 million copies of its Harry Potter game Hogwarts: Legacy last year, delivering well over $1 billion in revenue. The studio also released an update to one of its core video game franchises, Mortal Kombat. But while WBD already has a games studio (albeit small in scale compared to giants like EA and Activision Blizzard), companies like Netflix, Disney and NBCUniversal are trying to figure out the right way in.

Netflix has bet big on a mobile-first strategy, blending smaller-scale indie games with acquired titles (like Grand Theft Auto and an upcoming Sonic the Hedgehog game) and IP-driven offerings (like games based on its shows Virgin River and Money Heist).

The company is quick to note that games usage is still small compared to its core film and TV content, but that also means it has a lot of room to expand. Wells Fargo analyst Steven Cahall, for example, cited games as one reason that Netflix is “still a growth stock,” noting that games are an “additional content vector” that the company can try to own.

Disney has, until now, relied on licensing its IP (EA produces Star Wars titles, while Sony released Spider-Man 2 last year, in one of the biggest game releases of 2023), but the Epic investment marks a significant expansion, with Morgan Stanley’s Ben Swinburne likening the move to “playing offense” and “investing to position its IP where younger consumers spend more time.”
Epic, buoyed by its Fortnite franchise and long history with Disney (it participated in a 2017 Disney accelerator program, and Disney has licensed some characters like Marvel superheroes to be playable in the game), is seen as a way to grow in the space quickly. And for Hollywood, the IP is kind of the point, as Disney knows all too well, constantly bringing its characters and theming to its theme parks, merchandise lines, cruise ships, and devices like the newly launched Apple Vision Pro, where users can watch Star Wars while sitting in the cockpit of a land speeder parked outside the Mos Eisley Cantina.

For companies looking to build new brands or reinvigorate older ones, games are a new way to engage young consumers. “Our Harry Potter fans have immersed themselves in Hogwarts: Legacy, playing more than 700 million hours to date,” Zaslav told analysts. “That engagement helps not only our games business, but also helps build and revitalize the entire Harry Potter franchise, and we know our fans want even more.” (In a big bet on that franchise, WBD is now developing a Harry Potter TV series.) And just like the film and TV business, the hits work. Noted Peters, “One of the things that we’ve learned is that recognizable games — that’s either existing popular game titles or game franchises or games that are based on well-known IP, and in many cases, that’s IP from our own films and series — those are the ones that are working the best for us right now.”
 
Disney has, until now, relied on licensing its IP (EA produces Star Wars titles, while Sony released Spider-Man 2 last year, in one of the biggest game releases of 2023),
Hate when outlets cant even get basic facts right, Sony owns spider man rights, Disney has next to nothing to do with the Spider Man games. Shoulda listed Ubisoft and Massive's Star Wars Outlaws as a better example.

I also dont think this investment was that great an idea, Fortnite is waning in popularity and I dont think Disney will get the traction they think they will with this.
 
Hate when outlets cant even get basic facts right, Sony owns spider man rights, Disney has next to nothing to do with the Spider Man games. Shoulda listed Ubisoft and Massive's Star Wars Outlaws as a better example.

I also dont think this investment was that great an idea, Fortnite is waning in popularity and I dont think Disney will get the traction they think they will with this.
Disney owns 100% of the merchandising rights for Spider-man. Sony owns 100% of the film rights.

I could be misunderstanding the agreement in regards to video games tho.
 
Hate when outlets cant even get basic facts right, Sony owns spider man rights, Disney has next to nothing to do with the Spider Man games. Shoulda listed Ubisoft and Massive's Star Wars Outlaws as a better example.

I also dont think this investment was that great an idea, Fortnite is waning in popularity and I dont think Disney will get the traction they think they will with this.
The Unreal Engine probably more beneficial for Disney and game development than Fortnite.
 





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