I'm weighing in late here, so please bear with me.
To whoever said that Tokyo DL and Tokyo DisneySea prove that more money in equals more money out ... well, yes and no. We've all seen things that have had plenty of money dumped into them, only to turn out badly. "Pearl Harbor" comes to mind almost immediately. What Tokyo has -- in addition to more money than they know what to do with -- is some great creative vision. What they do NOT have is a true idea of how to use it. Yes, they have some amazing shows and stages and events and attractions. But a lot of them are just that -- amazing shows and stages and events. They don't fit into anything -- "Rhythms of the World" in a park that bases it's entire brand as "the sea?" A Christmas show that had everything but Santa's Christmas sink, simply because they had enough money to put in all the elves and reindeer and presents and characters and snowmen and Christmas trees AND a miniature version of Candlelight? TDS and TDL need to realize that just having money doesnt' make you better. It's how you use it. Granted, they are, hands down, the best Disney parks out there, but they're close to being out of control.
Regarding Roy and his motives ... it'll be no surprise to anyone here that I've thought since the beginning that Roy and Stan were out to "get Eisner" not "save Disney." And for those who believe that the two things are one in the same, I don't agree with that either. Just because you bring in a
different CEO doesn't mean you bring in a
better CEO. I agree with the Pirate where Comcast is concerned -- Roy and Stan seemed more concerned about how much the offer was for than they were about what a take-over would have meant to the assets of the Walt Disney Company. They were all about the money, not the independence, and I defy anyone to explain to me how being owned by Comcast -- for any price -- would have "saved Disney."
Last year we went round and round about how Roy had no idea how to "manage the peace," so to speak. He led a huge, successful, passionate stockholder revolt, and then ... well ... nothing. How many people thought that the stockholder vote last year was the END of the journey? That if everyone voted against Eisner, that ME would be gone and all would be well? It wasn't, obviously, it was just the beginning, and I think maybe even Roy didn't realize how formidable an opponent he had chosen.
Roy isn't Walt, and I don't think he ever wanted to be. He got thrust into the role because his last name was Disney. Even his kids aren't interested. Walt's daughter isn't really fond of Roy and didn't back him in his efforts. Roy had a history of quitting and walking away when he didn't get his way -- sometimes it worked for him (as it did with the Michael / Frank team), sometimes it didn't. There are some things that he opened peoples' eyes to, and a lot of shareholders voted his way last year simply because he told them to. If he'd have had a plan for what to do AFTER the meeting, he could have taken the whole enchilada. But he didn't. That's where he and Stan failed.
