I disagree. Chapek has committed a number of monstrous blunders.
The Scarlett Johansson fiasco, the Don’t Say Gay fiasco, and the on-right-now-oops-we-were-just-joking forced Lake Nona Florida move fiasco all happened on his watch.
The Imagineer corps has suffered under him.
More, he was a no-show on the WDW 50th Anniversary, reportedly because he was afraid of being booed off the stage.
The pandemic was hard on almost every publicly held company in America. But under Chapek, Disney stock has underperformed even a down market:
If you had put $100,000 in a DJIA-indexed fund on the day Chapek took over as CEO, you’d have $114,800 today.
If you had put $100,000 in Comcast (Universal’s parent) on the day Chapek took over as CEO, you’d still have $93,300 today.
If you’d put $100,000 in Disney stock on the day Chapek took over as CEO, you’d have just $75,000 today.
The man has overseen the gross “IP-ification” of EPCOT, the transformation of Illuminations into the soulless Harmonius, and several other obscenities. He disingenuously characterizes
Genie+ and the park reservation system as “enhancements to the guest experience,” and he doesn’t know the difference between
The Happiest Place on Earth and
The Most Magical Place on Earth.
I’m convinced that the only reason WDC extended his contract was fear the stock value would tank even more with perceived turmoil if he was fired right now.