You know.... getting outside of the direct purpose of the original article, The comments regarding the staying power of Disney Princesses vs. Harry Potter has gotten me thinking.....
For Generations, Disney has always had a HUGE draw from the classic animations. Snow White...Cinderella....Peter Pan...Pinocchio... and even the "renaissance era" of Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Lion King, Etc.
These films helped to continue to fuel Disney's profits as one generation who grew up with these films as major parts of their lives ended up having their own kids, and then introduced their kids to these films and characters.
But then Disney's animation department pretty much died in the mid-late 90's. We lost the Disney Afternoon with classics like Duck Tales, Talespin, Rescue Rangers, Darkwing, etc that helped reinforce many kid's love of all things Disney outside of the movie theater. The end result, While Disney had some decent films in the years just before the animation department was complete decimated (Hunchback, Herc, Mulan, Pocahontas), They just have the same influence as the films before them....let alone the same level of support from Disney.
In that same time frame, We had other major properties come up and gain the mindshare of younger generations that Disney used to almost be to call their own. Potter, Twilight, etc. All Disney's focus during that time seemed to be focused on the revolving door of the Disney Channel show-of-the-week staring the latest Disney Starlet/music star/merchandise bonanza.
So now we are at the point where we might actually have the first generation of kids starting to be raised who's parents don't have a contemporary Disney product of their own to pass along to their children and keep the cycle alive. (If you expand to include Pixar who is a recent Disney Aquisition, than maybe you do....). These parents may actually identify more with other properties such as Harry Potter than they would with some part of the overall Disney family like many of us do.
So the question I have to ask, is what will be the impact of this to the future of Disney? Many of us here have at least some sort of childhood Disney experience that we hold dear, and which in one way or another has helped spawn our love of all things Disney. It could've been watching Scrooge McDuck in his MoneyBin after school. Or going to the theater with a parent to see the rescuers.... or even growing up seeing Walt or later, Eisner.... on our TV's during
Disneyland/Wonderful world of Color/Wonderful World of Disney. somehow I'm not picturing "Even Stephens", or Hannah Montana having the same ability to be the spawn of a lifelong Disney love that get's passed along to future generations.
Thoughts?