KidDurango
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 23, 1999
- Messages
- 75
Every quarter, the naysayers and doom seers, along with a great number of the so called experts scream and rant and rave that the writing is on the wall, and that Disney will not be able to keep up. They say profits are going to drop substantially faster than the rest of the business world and everyone should drop their Disney stock now. Then the next quarterly earnings report comes out, and Disney has beat all estimates, which would normally cause stock prices to climb. Instead the analysts say , "Wow that was great, there is no way they can do it again, sell your stock now." So stock prices drop on even good news from the company. This has been going on for more than two years, and it is the same every quarter.
For those that are trashing this report as making money off of laying people off, then you are not actually reading the report. Profits were actually considerably higher, but the numbers were reduced due to the cost of paying all those severance packages. If things stay slow in the eceonomy, you will really see these cut backs were a smart move.
Yes, the company has layed off a large number of Imagineers, but that is the nature of the project business. Over an eighteen month period the company will have opened three theme parks. Each park had its own team of hundreds of Imagineers. Even if every park greenlighted a major E-ticket right now (a thought that is dreamy for some but fiscally irresposible in the real world) there would still be hundreds of Imagineers walking out the door.
As for box office, look at the box office across the board. Outside of Shrek, I dare you to name on film that has done as well as its parent studio expected this summer. Before you argue that that shows that Dreamworks knows how to do it right, please step back and look at A.I., created by one of the untouchable triumverate at Dreamworks. A.I. was supposed to be this amazing film from one of the greatest directors of all times and his recently deceased muse, but it has virtually disappeared from the box office.
Eisner is not always right, and some mistakes are being made, but he is not inherently evil, and the companies death certificate has not been signed.
For those that are trashing this report as making money off of laying people off, then you are not actually reading the report. Profits were actually considerably higher, but the numbers were reduced due to the cost of paying all those severance packages. If things stay slow in the eceonomy, you will really see these cut backs were a smart move.
Yes, the company has layed off a large number of Imagineers, but that is the nature of the project business. Over an eighteen month period the company will have opened three theme parks. Each park had its own team of hundreds of Imagineers. Even if every park greenlighted a major E-ticket right now (a thought that is dreamy for some but fiscally irresposible in the real world) there would still be hundreds of Imagineers walking out the door.
As for box office, look at the box office across the board. Outside of Shrek, I dare you to name on film that has done as well as its parent studio expected this summer. Before you argue that that shows that Dreamworks knows how to do it right, please step back and look at A.I., created by one of the untouchable triumverate at Dreamworks. A.I. was supposed to be this amazing film from one of the greatest directors of all times and his recently deceased muse, but it has virtually disappeared from the box office.
Eisner is not always right, and some mistakes are being made, but he is not inherently evil, and the companies death certificate has not been signed.