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https://money.yahoo.com/unilever-ceo-on-working-with-activist-investor-nelson-peltz-102202819.html

Unilever CEO: 'I'm thoroughly enjoying' working with activist investor Nelson Peltz​

Brian Sozzi
·Anchor, Editor-at-Large
November 1, 2022·2 min read


So far so good says Unilever's CEO Alan Jope in working with his new board member, noted activist investor Nelson Peltz.

"I would like to just confirm that Nelson is turning out to be a great member of the board,"Jope said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). "I'm thoroughly enjoying working with him. And as far as he tells me, he's enjoying working with me."

Peltz joined the board of the consumer products giant in May.

Investors are banking on Peltz to push through a turnaround of the lumbering Unilever, maker of everything from Hellman's mayonnaise to Vaseline. Peltz has the track record in consumer products to do so: he was an instrumental figure in reorganizing P&G as a then member of that board. The company restructured its divisions, cut costs and has since gone onto a product innovation boom.

P&G stock has been a top-performer the past five years, up 56%.

Peltz also worked closely with now former P&G CEO David Taylor, who ended up praising Peltz's work after a contentious proxy fight.

As for long-time Unilever exec Jope, he said in late September that he plans to retire at the end of 2023. The decision comes amid a lagging stock price for Unilever since he took over in 2019, several mixed quarters, and calls by Wall Street to cut costs and divest assets.

Jope told Yahoo Finance that he will still retire next year despite getting along well with Peltz, adding that investors shouldn't expect a major operational overhaul on his watch.

"We've been busy on portfolio change," Jope said. "We've committed to the market that we are not undertaking a major portfolio change for the foreseeable future. And our board is unanimously aligned behind the strategy that we've laid out in our last couple of earnings quarters and we will again in our Capital Markets Day. So please don't be expecting any surprises from Unilever. We've got five wonderful divisions, a business that's capable of delivering high-quality growth, and that, as you'll see from our performance and our share price, is rather resilient through the types of downturn that the world is going into right now."
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...disneys-tax-privileges/ar-AA14SqCl?li=BBnb7Kz

Iger's Return Opens Door for Florida Lawmakers to Consider Restoring Disney's Tax Privileges
by Arian Campo-Flores
12/3/22

A Florida lawmaker said Robert Iger‘s return as Walt Disney Co.’s chief executive has boosted the prospects that the state could work out a new deal with the entertainment company after passing an April law to end certain Disney tax privileges.


A special district, created in 1967 and known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District, has exempted Disney from numerous regulations and various taxes and fees. It has permitted the company to manage its theme parks and resorts in Florida with little red tape for more than 50 years. Under the law passed in April, the special district would be dissolved on June 1, 2023.


But Republican state Rep. Randy Fine, who sponsored the bill to end the special district, said Mr. Iger’s return could help the state reach a different resolution because state politicians believe he will avoid getting as entangled in Florida politics.

“It’s more likely we have a better partner to work with now,” Mr. Fine said.

The dispute between Florida Republican lawmakers and Disney began when the company under former CEO Bob Chapek spoke out against the Parental Rights in Education law, which critics call the “Don’t Say Gay” legislation. The measure bars classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity through third grade, and limits it for older students to material that is “age-appropriate.”

Disney initially didn’t comment on the law, but came under pressure from employees to oppose it. After it passed, the company pledged to push for its repeal and to fight similar bills in other states.


One possibility would be to create a new district, Mr. Fine said. This new district wouldn’t include as many privileges of the previous one, such as selling bonds and seizing land through eminent domain.

No specific deal is under discussion, he added, and Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’s office has indicated a reversal of that decision is out of the question.

“The governor was right to champion removing the extraordinary benefit given to one company,” Bryan Griffin, a spokesman for Mr. DeSantis, wrote Friday on Twitter. “We will have an even playing field for businesses in Florida, and the state certainly owes no special favors to one company.”

A spokesman for Disney declined to comment.

Disney, as the primary landowner at Reedy Creek, has provided most of the revenue from taxes and fees that the district has collected. That money covers all the district’s governing expenses and is used to service the long-term bond debt that Reedy Creek has issued over the years. Dissolving the district could be a complicated process and trigger legal battles, according to analysts.

Jeff Brandes, a former senator from the Tampa Bay area who worked closely with both Mr. DeSantis’s office and Disney’s Florida government affairs staff until the recent conclusion of his term, said that the dispute over Reedy Creek was “Kabuki theater” from the very start. He said Republicans in the legislature have long expected Disney and the governor’s office to work out a deal to avoid raising taxes on residents of the counties surrounding Walt Disney World and avoid a default on the roughly $1 billion in outstanding bonds issued by Reedy Creek.

Mr. Griffin wrote Friday on Twitter, “Disney’s debts will not fall on the taxpayers of Florida. A plan is in the works and will be released soon.”

Write to Arian Campo-Flores at arian.campo-flores@dowjones.com
 
https://www.latimes.com/entertainme...xecutive-who-helped-define-the-bob-chapek-era

Kareem Daniel and the rise and fall of the Disney executive who helped define the Bob Chapek era

By Ryan Faughnder, Meg James
Dec. 2, 2022 1:13 PM PT

For more than a decade, Kareem Daniel faithfully followed the Walt Disney Co. script for success.

The 48-year-old executive had a Stanford MBA. He started as an intern and held key leadership roles with divisions including the Imagineers, the vaunted designers of theme park rides. He was a movie buff and an unabashed fan of Disney properties — his favorite toy as a boy was the Millennium Falcon, the hulking spaceship from “Star Wars.”

His ascent accelerated in 2020 when his mentor, Bob Chapek, became Disney’s chief executive. Daniel was tapped to run consumer products, and five months later, he hurdled over more experienced executives to lead a massive new and controversial business unit.

For Disney’s Black employees, Daniel’s rise was a point of pride. His promotion came after a summer of protests over the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and media companies were under the microscope for their lack of diversity in the C-suite.

“There was an African American male at the top — that was huge,” said a former Disney executive who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. “It seemed that he was suddenly in the succession line.”

He was the czar in charge of $30 billion a year in program spending, deciding release strategies for Disney’s movies and TV shows, steering them to streaming services, Disney+, ESPN+ or Hulu, theaters or one of the company’s TV channels.

That changed last month, when Disney’s board of directors abruptly fired Chapek and brought back the Burbank giant’s respected former chief executive Bob Iger, less than a year after he had said goodbye. Iger’s first act was to announce a review of Daniel’s division — Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution, known as DMED — and show Daniel the door.

Disney insiders cheered the dismantling of the maligned DMED (pronounced Dee-med). The move promised to unwind what many said was one of Chapek’s biggest mistakes in his nearly three years as Disney’s CEO. Daniel and Chapek had designed a structure that was meant to streamline decision-making to boost Disney’s portfolio of direct-to-consumer apps — which, at the time, were in vogue on Wall Street. Financial executives, not those who developed the programming, were in the driver’s seat.

But the arrangement fostered resentment among creative executives in the film and TV studios who felt their authority was slipping away.

Daniel’s tenure atop DMED and subsequent ouster was a classic case of corporate politics unfolding at the world’s most powerful entertainment company. It’s common practice for a new regime to briskly push aside a fired CEO’s closest deputies and allies, and Daniel’s proximity to Chapek put him well within the blast radius. (Daniel also acted as Chapek’s chief of staff in 2020 before being tapped to lead DMED.)

Getting rid of Daniel was a quick and symbolic way for Iger to signal a clean break with the prior regime and restore balance to a company that had been rattled by infighting, a falling stock price, the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, political battles in Florida and greater than expected financial losses in streaming.

“Kareem’s crime was that he was close to Chapek and that he helped design and led an organizational construct that was hated by the creatives,” said one former Disney executive.

Iger created a task force to restructure Disney again, returning clout to the creative heads, in a swift rebuke of Chapek’s leadership.

“The announcement I made last week about DMED, which is a work in progress, is designed to do one thing: to restore to the creative businesses the control, responsibility, and accountability over what we create,” Iger said in a Monday morning town hall with employees on Disney’s Burbank lot. “That’s how this company has been structured for most of its history, and that’s how it will be structured going forward.”

The shake-up was reminiscent of another Iger move years ago.

Under his predecessor, Michael Eisner, key decision-making was centralized in a strategic planning business unit run by former executive Peter Murphy, whose domineering style infuriated creative executives. After Iger was named CEO in 2005, Murphy was stripped of power and the strategic planning group was dramatically downsized with the similar goal of returning responsibility to creative leaders.

“When you get to certain levels in our industry, structural issues and corporate politics become involved,” said one Disney executive who was not authorized to comment. “The stakes are very high.”
Still, some were taken aback at the swiftness of Daniel’s dismissal, considering his stature at Disney and the company’s historic shortage of people of color in its upper ranks.

“Our town’s not the most tenderhearted, but discarding high-end senior talent? I don’t think it promotes stability,” said one prominent agent who declined to be identified to protect business relationships.

Daniel did not respond to requests for comment. Disney declined to comment.

Daniel grew up on the South Side of Chicago, spending hours reading Marvel and other comics at Chicago Ridge Mall. He also developed a lasting fondness for film.

“My favorite thing growing up was going to the movies,” Daniel said in an interview earlier this year with Disney’s KABC-TV station, in which he described going to see “The Empire Strikes Back.” “I went with my mom. We were leaving the theater and she saw that joy on my face, and she asked if I wanted to see it again.”

The son of a professor and a nurse, Daniel followed his sister at the academically rigorous Morgan Park Academy in Chicago, going on to earn his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and an MBA from Stanford University.

In media interviews, Daniel described his desire to land a job at Disney.

It was Chapek who opened the door. While Daniel was in graduate school, Daniel pushed for an interview and ultimately met with Chapek, who hired him as an intern. After he earned his MBA, Daniel entered the investment banking world, working about three years at Goldman Sachs. He joined Disney in 2007 in strategic planning, and he ended up working on the 2009 acquisition of Marvel Entertainment.

He had jobs overseeing distribution strategy for Disney’s movies, then business strategy for consumer products and video games before being placed in a leadership role at Imagineering, the group that designs Disney’s theme park attractions.

Former Imagineer Jim Shull recalls guiding Daniel on a tour of the company’s Shanghai park, where he asked questions about the process of designing park attractions, typical for an executive coming into an unfamiliar part of the business.

“He was extremely personable and asked a lot of the right questions,” Shull said. “He was stepping into a world he’d never been part of.”

At Imagineering, Daniel supported some important initiatives, like the revamping of Splash Mountain, which was inspired by the racist 1946 film “Song of the South.”

But some Imagineers bristled under his bottom line-focused management style, said two people familiar with his tenure. In May 2020, three months after Chapek stepped into the top job, Daniel was named president of consumer products, gaming and publishing.

Just five months later, Daniel was running DMED.

Chapek’s idea to restructure Disney may have made sense on paper and at the height of the pandemic, when sign-ups for Disney+ were surging. Chapek wanted to accelerate Disney’s pivot to a primarily direct-to-consumer model.

To help with that push, Chapek wanted Daniel’s group to figure out the best way to bring Disney’s content to the public — either on streaming, in theaters or on channels such as ABC, Freeform or FX. Meanwhile, the heads of the programming and studio divisions would focus on what they did best: making shows and movies.

But in practice, the structure confused outside creatives who couldn’t tell who was really in charge. Division heads felt their power being stripped.

Internally, there was confusion and awkward boundaries. For example, the movie studio had long enjoyed oversight of theatrical box office revenues, but suddenly that function was part of DMED’s purview.

And Daniel’s group seemed poised to gain even more power.

In recent months, consultants from the advisory firm McKinsey & Co. had been working with Disney to further centralize decision-making functions and cut costs, an effort led by Disney Chief Financial Officer Christine McCarthy, according to people familiar with the effort. The Wall Street Journal first reported the involvement of the consultants.

Daniel also began lobbying to bring marketing spending for the company’s content into his DMED group, according to the knowledgeable people. Such a switch would mark another erosion of power for the film and TV studio executives. At an October corporate retreat in Orlando, Chapek told Disney leaders that the company had to seriously look at its marketing operations, which raised eyebrows and fueled more discontent.

McKinsey is still working with Disney, people familiar with the matter said.

Disney insiders painted a mixed portrait of Daniel. Several executives described him as smart, hardworking and driven. In October, he was elected to McDonald’s Corp.'s board of directors.

But others criticized his unsentimental approach to decisions, saying it could come across as overly clinical. Detractors complained that Daniel lacked experience to manage such an enormous and unwieldy portfolio. Numerous people described him as unbending and “arrogant.” Said one Disney insider: “He was very harsh on his subordinates.”

In addition to distribution and advertising sales, Daniel’s group was also responsible for the operations of the company’s streaming services.

Insiders said that relations between DMED and the creative executives were cordial in person and in public settings, but some creatives seethed in private. Daniel, like Chapek, adhered to a management style known as ARCI (accountable, responsible, consulted, informed), seen as a way of clearly assigning accountability. He brought an engineer’s mind-set to the job, taking the emotion out of decision-making.

That approach didn’t sit well with producers and creatives who worked for years on projects that they saw as labors of love. Animators, for example, were disappointed when earlier this year, Disney sent Pixar’s “Turning Red,” a highly personal movie about a Chinese Canadian adolescent girl, straight to Disney+, skipping a theatrical release.

At the time, Daniel defended the decision.

“Given the delayed box office recovery, particularly for family films, flexibility remains at the core of our distribution decisions,” he said in a statement.

Daniel’s ties to Chapek contributed to his downfall.

Chapek and Daniel were good friends outside the office. They shared inside jokes and humorous photos of each other’s travels to the theme parks, according to a person who knows both executives.
Daniel’s competitive zeal became the talk of a 2019 corporate retreat at Walt Disney World in Orlando, according to two former executives who were in attendance.

The retreat included the awarding of trophies for sporting events. There, Daniel played on a softball team led by Iger, who tried to rally his team from falling behind. Up to the plate, Daniel hit a ground ball and charged down the first base line, colliding with Chapek, who was on the opposite team. Chapek was bleeding from the head and needed medical attention.

Iger and Daniel’s team went on to win, the former executives said.

On Sunday, Nov. 20, Daniel arrived at Dodger Stadium for Elton John’s final “Farewell Yellow Brick Road” concert in North America, which was livestreamed on Disney+. The executive had just stepped out of his car at the valet line and into Disney’s hospitality tent where dignitaries mingled, when phones of Disney executives in attendance lit up with Iger’s email announcement that he was returning as chief executive.

Disney executives were stunned. Daniel quickly turned around and left the event, according to three people knowledgeable of the situation.

The following morning, Daniel was out of his job.

“This was about how the company should be structured, and that transcends who should be in any particular job,” said one Disney executive.

But the former Disney executive who spoke of Black employees’ pride for Daniel expressed sadness over his unceremonious departure.

“Kareem was the first African American executive to be put in a position of power at that level,” the former employee said. “And for it to fall apart in just two years is absolutely tragic.”

Times staff writer Stephen Battaglio contributed to this article.
 
https://www.ft.com/content/80eb174d-e5f1-42fa-b92e-ba44465b4ab6

Disney battles to preserve the powers of its kingdom in Florida
A compromise with governor Ron DeSantis might allow Disney World to continue to tax itself
Walt and Roy Disney did a deal with Florida that allowed them to operate what is essentially a private government in Orlando

Christopher Grimes in Orlando, Florida
12/4/22

When Walt and Roy Disney were dreaming up their plan to transform 25,000 acres of Florida swampland into a utopian city and theme park in the mid-1960s, they wanted none of the oversight they faced from California authorities when they built Disneyland.

By the end of a highly effective PR push, Disney had got its wish: Florida handed the company the powers to essentially run a private government. Among the extraordinary rights granted to Disney by the Florida legislature in 1967 was the ability to construct a nuclear power plant and an airport on the property. Disney never built the power plant or the airport around Disney World. But the company’s legal right to do so could be a useful bargaining chip as Disney seeks to preserve its 55-year-old “special taxing district” in Florida, known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which the state’s governor wants dissolved.

This spring, Reedy Creek became an unlikely pawn in the culture wars as Florida governor Ron DeSantis battled with Disney, whose then-chief executive Bob Chapek had criticised the state’s law restricting discussion of LGBTQ issues in classrooms. In what was widely seen as retaliation for Chapek’s criticism of the legislation critics branded “Don’t Say Gay”, DeSantis signed a hastily written bill into law that is scheduled to dissolve Reedy Creek in June.

The governor’s office has not detailed what will replace it, though a spokesman for DeSantis said in a statement on Friday that a “plan is in the works and will be released soon”. However, there are concerns that the costs of assuming Reedy Creek’s responsibilities — which include providing water, power, roads and fire services, all paid for by a tax Disney levies on itself — will fall on Florida taxpayers.
Similar fears surround the fate of its nearly $1bn in municipal debt, which was downgraded by Fitch ratings after the law was signed. Richard Foglesong, a historian and political scientist at Rollins College, says Florida law is clear: the tax paid by Disney would fall to residents of nearby Orange and Osceola counties if Reedy Creek goes away. “This is not going to come to fruition,” he said. “This will be repealed and forgotten.”

DeSantis’s spokesman said in the statement that “Disney’s debts will not fall on the taxpayers of Florida”. But concerned Florida lawmakers are discussing a plan to create a “successor” bill that would replace the law DeSantis signed less than eight months ago. The goal, they say, would be to preserve Disney’s special tax status while chipping away enough of the company’s power to satisfy DeSantis.

“Somehow they have to thread the needle so that burden falls back on Disney and it retains the ability to tax itself,” says Foglesong, author of Married to the Mouse, a history of Disney in Florida.

“Who would want to pay the price of building [and maintaining] this incredible theme park?”

A focus of lawmakers’ discussions can be found on page 295 of the 1967 law that granted Disney the expansive powers it has wielded for 50 years. Disney, the law says, has the right to construct and operate “plants and facilities . . . for the generation and transmission of power through nuclear fission and other new and experimental sources of power and energy”. At the time, nuclear power was on the rise, and it fitted with the Disneys’ vision of building a city of the future.

But the company never acted on the idea. Now, however, some Florida politicians see it as part of a potential solution to the Reedy Creek dilemma. Linda Stewart, a Democratic senator whose district includes parts of Orlando, told the Financial Times that stripping Disney of the ability to build a nuclear plant or an airport could be part of a new replacement bill — along with allowing the governor to appoint two members of the Reedy Creek board.

“I don’t care if they can’t build a nuclear facility,” she said. “That’s fine with me.” A key question is whether barring Disney from investing in infrastructure it has no intention of building will be enough for DeSantis, whose decisive re-election in November has made him an early frontrunner in the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

“He can’t go away and just give in” on Reedy Creek, Stewart said. “He’s going to have to get something out of it.”

Another potential factor is Disney’s firing last month of Chapek, who had been an object of DeSantis’s scorn. DeSantis became a conservative hero this year for labelling Disney a “woke” company, while Chapek was blamed by Disney employees — including LGBTQ workers at Disney World who were angry about the Florida education law — for mishandling the episode.

But Bob Iger, who led Disney for 15 years and has stepped back into the CEO role for the next two years, is known for having a deft political touch. This week Iger told employees he was “sorry to see us get dragged into [the] battle” over Reedy Creek, adding that “the state of Florida has been important to us for a long time and we have been very important to the state of Florida”.

Randy Fine, the Republican state congressman who was a sponsor of the Reedy Creek bill, told the FT this week that Iger’s return to Disney should improve chances that “something will get worked out”. However, DeSantis hardly sounded conciliatory this week when asked on Fox News about Iger’s comments. “Yes, they’re a big powerful company but we stand up for our folks,” he said. “I don’t care what a Burbank [California] based company says about our laws.”

Disney still has a number of cards to play, however — chief among them its reputation for operating the park complex at a high standard. Reedy Creek’s technocratic five-member board has few residents to answer to, allowing it to move quickly on decisions. “It’s better that [Disney] runs it,” Foglesong says. “They believe in expertise.”

At a recent board meeting, a Reedy Creek official noted that the district produces more solar energy than any other local government in the state — with the help of an array of panels called Mickey — thanks in part to clean energy targets set by Disney. Anna Eskamani, a progressive Democrat who represents Orlando in the Florida House, is a frequent Disney critic but agrees that it would be difficult for the public sector to maintain the standards of Reedy Creek.

She notes that in addition to paying property taxes, Disney taxes itself at a rate that is higher than the nearby counties are allowed to charge. “When you go to Disney there are no mosquitoes because they have intensive mosquito control,” she notes as an example of Disney’s competence. “Orange County could not do what Reedy Creek does.” It is an argument that Walt and Roy Disney might well have made themselves.
 


Among the extraordinary rights granted to Disney by the Florida legislature in 1967 was the ability to construct a nuclear power plant and an airport on the property. Disney never built the power plant or the airport around Disney World. But the company’s legal right to do so could be a useful bargaining chip as Disney seeks to preserve its 55-year-old “special taxing district” in Florida,
So amused by this. The ability to construct and operate a nuclear power plant is regulated by the NRC. It has nothing to do with what jurisdiction the plant would be located in or who owns it.

Also, There was indeed an airport at WDW but it has long ago been discontinued. It was a STOL (short take of and landing) port, the remains of which can be seen alongside the monorail beam going from the TTC to Epcot. Airports are controlled by the FAA so again it has nothing to do with the jurisdiction that it's located.
 


https://ew.com/movies/black-panther-wakanda-forever-box-office-week-4/


A combatant Santa Claus couldn't dethrone Queen Ramonda and the Wakandians' rule at the box office.

The Black Panther sequel retained its No. 1 spot atop the domestic and global box office for a fourth week in a row. Wakanda Forever earned an extra $17.5 million across North American theaters this weekend, pulling in $393.7 million overall since its Nov. 11 theatrical debut. Worldwide, it has grossed an estimated $733 million.
 
https://www.cartoonbrew.com/box-off...plummets-60-in-its-second-weekend-223778.html

Disney’s ‘Strange World’ Plummets 60% In Its Second Weekend
By Amid Amidi | 12/04/2022 8:38 pm | 5

Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Strange World crashed nearly 60% in its second weekend, earning an estimated $4.9 million. It did so while screening in more theaters – 4,174 – than any other film in North American theaters, drawing just $1,178 per screen.

The dismal second weekend follows a disastrous Thanksgiving holiday launch, in which the film failed to reach its already tepid box office projections and ended up with a ‘B’ from the market research film Cinemascore, which is unheard of for a Disney film. Strange World’s total stands at $25.5M, and it is currently on pace to become the lowest-grossing Walt Disney Animation Studios film since 2011’s Winnie the Pooh, which was the studio’s last hand-drawn animated feature. The difference was that Winnie the Pooh had a budget of around $30M; the budget of Strange World has been reported by Hollywood trades to be anywhere between $135-180M.

What’s clear at this point is that the Don Hall-directed Disney film won’t come anywhere near the top-earning animation films of 2022, including Illumination’s Minions: The Rise of Gru ($369.5M), Pixar’s Lightyear ($118.3M), Dreamworks Animation’s The Bad Guys ($97.2M) and Warner Animation Group’s DC League of Super-Pets ($93.6M). Rather, Strange World will have to work hard to top domestic releases of anime titles like Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero ($38.1M) and Jujutsu Kaisen 0: The Movie ($34.5M), and it will be an uphill grind that becomes even more difficult with the upcoming releases of Avatar: The Way of Water and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish.
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Internationally, Strange World picked up $5.4M from 43 markets in its second frame. That’s $16.8M total from abroad, lifting the worldwide cume to $42.3M. Top foreign plays are U.K., Mexico, Spain, Germany, and Italy, though it has yet to crack $2M in any country outside of the U.S.

While much has been made about the lack of marketing for the film, there are indications that the studio knew months in advance that the film wasn’t testing well. The limited marketing was likely an internal decision so as to not throw good money after bad. And while former Disney CEO Bob Chapek will likely get much of the blame for the film’s failure, Disney Animation head Jennifer Lee had started developing the film while Bob Iger was still running the company the first time around.

The failure of Strange World is uncharted territory for Disney Animation in its modern cg era, so expect the blame game to continue as executives try to distance themselves from the project. There is likely to be fallout of some kind at the upper levels of the studio’s management. Who ends up getting the blame for the film’s performance remains to be seen.
 
https://variety.com/2022/biz/news/disney-heather-hust-rivera-exit-company-1235450883/

Dec 5, 2022 4:00pm PT
Disney Senior Vice President of Communications Heather Hust Rivera to Exit Company After Almost 20 Years (EXCLUSIVE)
By Joe Otterson

Heather Hust Rivera, the senior vice president of communications at Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution (DMED), is exiting the company after nearly two decades, Variety has learned exclusively.

“I’m grateful for the incredible opportunities I have had in the past 17 years at Disney, working across multiple businesses with some of the industry’s hardest working, most talented, and amazingly creative people,” Hust Rivera said in a statement to Variety. “I wish the team nothing but the best, and look forward to what the next chapter holds.”

Hust Rivera’s exit is not altogether surprising, as she served as a chief communications representative of Kareem Daniel, who stepped down as the chairman of DMED in late November.

The moves come as returning CEO Bob Iger looks to restructure the company following the sudden ouster of Bob Chapek after three years. Chapek had himself reorganized Disney with the creation of DMED, with the aim being to focus the company more toward its streaming business. Iger made it clear that more changes would be coming to DMED in a memo to staff in which he announced Daniels’ resignation, with many industry insiders speculating the group will eliminated altogether.

Daniel and Hust Rivera are the third high-ranking executives to leave Disney following Chapek’s departure, with the other being Chapek lieutenant Arthur Bochner.

Hust Rivera was named to her role at DMED in March 2021. She oversaw global communications for all of DMED, which included Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+, and Star+ as well as linear television channels including ABC, Disney Channel, ESPN, Freeform, FX, and National Geographic. Her purview also included comms for ABC owned-stations, advertising sales, Disney Music Group, content licensing and distribution, and theatrical film distribution.

She first joined Disney in various publicity roles for the parks and resorts department before moving on to lead all of Disney’s video, web, and social media teams for corporate functions. She also worked for Disney’s consumer products, games and publishing division as the vice president of communications and public relations. Before she worked at Disney, she worked at the United States Mission to the United Nations.
 
Not sure if this is in the topic of stock/shareholders, but I'm sure the newest lawsuit over the Genie technology will have some effect on price.

Disney getting hit from all angles lately.
 
https://deadline.com/2022/12/disney-bob-iger-christine-mccarthy-ceo-successor-bob-chapek-1235190043/

Disney’s Christine McCarthy Emerges As Top CEO Contender To Succeed Bob Iger; CFO Was King Killer Who Took Down Bob Chapek
By Jill Goldsmith, Dominic Patten
December 6, 2022 6:00am

With the unexpected return of Bob Iger last month for a new stint as Disney CEO, the entertainment giant’s veteran chief financial officer Christine McCarthy has emerged as a leading contender to take over the top job.

“Christine has always been a force to be reckoned with, but you have to put her on a list of top five possibilities after the last few weeks,” a Disney insider said of the now prominent CFO. If McCarthy was handed the keys to the Magic Kingdom in the next 23 months, the exec would occupy a historic position as the first female CEO in Disney’s soon to be more than 100 year existence.

CFOs are key managers but more often than not low profile, working behind the scenes, emerging during earnings season and the occasional investor conference. Rarely do they take center stage, especially in the heat of battle leading the troops into a messy ouster of their boss — and rarer still do they become a king killer.

That’s what happened, however, with McCarthy, the longtime Disney treasurer who became CFO in 2015.

A steady hand in the previous Iger regime and when Chapek was in charge, McCarthy was influential in helping to successfully engineer a string of key mergers, and adept at raising and husbanding cash during the depth of Covid.

Yet, on November 20, the CFO became the public face of the Disney coup d’état. Distraught by the company’s dire bottom line and missteps by Chapek over the last 18 months, McCarthy is the executive whose name is now in the history books for going to the board and its chair Susan Arnold to orchestrate a revolt in the executive suite that brought Iger back after less than a year of official retirement.

Going to Arnold in mid-November, McCarthy, one of the highest-ranking women in the entertainment industry, threatened to resign if Chapek was not cut loose immediately.

“In the 35 years I’ve been doing this, I never saw a CFO go around a CEO,” said one longtime Wall Street analyst, with a tinge of amazement in his voice weeks after McCarthy cut the knees out from under Chapek and his reign of error.

Now Iger, who had handpicked Chapek in late 2019 before quickly souring on the former head of parks and resorts, has just under two years to pick and position a viable successor. In that vein, it’s not surprising the CFO’s name appears in the top five list of talked about candidates for the future CEO job. However, with Iger’s successor track record in mind, that list, which some have placed Dana Walden, chair of Disney General Entertainment Content on too, needs to be trimmed down to one name pronto.

Reality is there aren’t a lot of seasoned executives in or out of the Disney pipeline that have the institutional memory, board relationships, and leadership chops to avoid on the job training and a repeat of the Chapek experiment.

Fact is Tom Staggs’ stunning exit in 2016 as chief operating officer, and streaming kingpin Kevin Mayer’s subsequent departure in 2020 thinned out the Disney upper ranks — before Chapek was tipped as CEO by Iger. Even with scant talent and creative credentials, that pruning leaves McCarthy in a strong position, one media banker noted recently. To varying degrees, the anointed Staggs and golden boy Mayer had both been considered successors to Iger and both left after being passed over and iced out. It’s unlikely, however, that either could move back to the company and the top job unless Disney agreed to buy out Candle Media, a lucrative venture the friends and former colleagues launched with backing from Blackstone.

Analysts and fund managers really liked Staggs, who was also the CFO for years, and are fans of the current chief financial officer, calling McCarthy “very honest,” “very capable” and “a straight shooter.”

“She really shined when the pandemic hit. She did exactly what the CFO should do. She lined up enough cash for one to two years of no revenue. She put together a huge bundle of cash at reasonable rates very quickly to protect the company,” said one.

Disney’s last financial results, however, were shocking as the company spent and spent on streaming, with losses in the division ballooning to nearly $1.5 billion for the fiscal fourth quarter ending in September — more than twice the red ink of the year before and much steeper than expected. Disney’s guidance for next year also looked grim. Analysts wish the company had managed expectations better — which might have avoided a rout of Disney stock.

On an earnings call with analysts after the numbers, Chapek let the deft McCarthy do most of the talking. “She handled all those questions,” said one analyst, of the biology major and botanist who worked at banks for two decades before joining Disney in 2000. Insiders describe McCarthy, who lists aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart as her hero, as “the kind of person who really has the best interests of the company at heart,” as well as “incredibly smart” and a great mentor to women at Disney.

Still, with all McCarthy’s strengths and her recent major muscle flex, time may prevent her from being in the final CEO mix, suggests one Wall Streeter. McCarthy is 67-years-old. “Bob Iger was originally supposed to retire about six years ago when he was 65. So I don’t see them hiring someone [that age] to be CEO” for the long term. “They just went through… how many transitions?”

Whatever the final verdict on a new CEO to replace the 71-year-old Iger for the second time, McCarthy appears certain to be a key player at a delicate period for Disney and the broader media landscape. “Investors are waiting for Iger’s direction on DTC investment, how it plans to drive subscribers, but not any price. This is a market right now that is focused on the cost of that growth, hoping Bob [Iger] gets in there and reviews what his plans are and how spending will drive future profitability.”

Iger has already said he will restructure DMED, or Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution, an unpopular division Chapek created that kneecapped creative decision makers at the company. McCarthy, with Walden, Alan Bergman, Jimmy Pitaro will be working to design “a new structure that puts more decision-making back in the hands of our creative teams and rationalizes costs.”

Which means, to quote Iger’s beloved Hamilton, she will be right in the center of the room where it happens, one way or another.
 
Not sure if this is in the topic of stock/shareholders, but I'm sure the newest lawsuit over the Genie technology will have some effect on price.

Disney getting hit from all angles lately.
It would be too bad if the State of California lawsuit halted the sale of Genie in the same way it has halted APs… Andwould drag on forever.
What would happen without Genie ? The return of FP forced back on the guests. I could suffer happily. (Do not like giving money to Genie )
 
It would be too bad if the State of California lawsuit halted the sale of Genie in the same way it has halted APs… Andwould drag on forever.
What would happen without Genie ? The return of FP forced back on the guests. I could suffer happily. (Do not like giving money to Genie )
I don't recall seeing anything about a Genie lawsuit, do you have links to any articles?
Thanks!
 
Interesting, ran thru a few pages of the PDF and it looks like the company suing bought the patent, which was originally filed 20 years ago, just recently. Could this be some patent trolling going after Dis deep pockets? It does seem like they may have a decent basis for the suit since Dis was denied a patent more than a few times.

It's always something...
 

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