Are there any publications on the history of operations at WDW.
Sadly, not really.
Books about Disney fall into either three categories. You get the typical academic type thats all a shred about how capitalism is evil, how America is evil and most of all how Disney is evil. I guess the most famous of these would be Vinyl Leaves. These books contain very little actual information about Disney but their ignorance and Keith Obermann like frothing at the mouth make than funny to read.
The internally produced books like the series on Imagineering and the old Abrams books are nice, but dont cover the
real history. They have plenty of pictures and drawings but not much the discusses the real decision making that goes into running the company or creating something like WDW.
The other series of books are the glowing puff pieces written during the height of The Finance Bubble (I guess we can now talk that era which ran from the early 1980s until last Sunday). These were the whole series of Michael Eisner Mega Master Media Mogul!!! Lets just say that history has not been kind to those books. Even Disney Wars[/i] started out as one of them, but the author actually dug into what was happening.
The one book I can recommend is Storming the Magic Kingdom. It details the Bass Brothers takeover of Disney. It provides a lot of essential information about Disney prior to Eisner and the internal conflict (Walts side vs. Roys side) that really lead the company to implode. Contrary to popular myth, Disney was not all most bankrupt and Eisner did not save the company.
I havent yet read Realityland, but I read the authors other books. They provide the kind of information you would here if you worked at Disney (like the author did), but it lacks the corporate office insight where all the really big stuff gets made. It will tell you what its like to run the monorails, but it wont tell you about the tortured history of WDWs monorail expansion plans.
He knew how to approve a script and set a production philosophy in the film and television divisions.
There is an awful lot of debate about that. At Paramount, Eisner was guided from on top by Barry Diller the man who eventually went on to create the Fox media empire (and made billions when he sold it to Rupert).
At Disney, it was Jeffrey Katzenberg who was really running the studio. Early Eisner was pretty much like to play big shot in Hollywood, the appear on television whenever he could, to dance about with famous architects and review carpet samples. Eisner spent most of his time zooming on the fun details of the job (yes, like picking out the paint schemes for WDWs busses). But that didnt leave any time for really running the business. The actual job of reading scripts and deciding which one to do was left to others.
And you can see that at work. Look at the massive shift in Disney films and fortunes after Katzenberg left. Early Eisner Disney was known for tight, profitable pictures like
Three Men and a Baby. After Katzenberg, Eisner was forced to picked projects himself and we got giant, high profile failures like
Pearl Harbor and
The Alamo. For a while Eisner tried to outsource the studio to Jerry Bruckheimer and that definitely produced mixed results.