From Reuters:
“Walt Disney
restructures entertainment businesses to boost streaming”
Walt Disney Co
DIS.N said on Monday it had restructured its media and entertainment businesses
to accelerate growth of Disney+ and other streaming services as consumers
increasingly gravitate to digital viewing. Under the reorganization, Disney
will separate the development and production of programming from distribution
to be more responsive to consumer demands. The move came days after activist
investor Daniel Loeb of hedge fund Third Point urged Disney to forgo a dividend
payment and double its programming investment in streaming. Disney shares rose
nearly 5% in after-hours trading to $130.76. The media and theme parks company
launched the Disney+ streaming service in November 2019. It has exceeded its
own targets by drawing more than 100 million streaming customers worldwide to
Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+. Streaming pioneer Netflix Inc NFLX.O boasts 193
million, but has built that customer base over the 13 years. Loeb had argued
that Disney needed to cut its dividend to increase spending on new TV shows and
movies to sign up new customers more quickly. Disney Chief Executive Bob
Chapek, in an interview with CNBC, said the company is planning to increase
investments in content but he did not say if it was prepared to cut its
dividend to finance the strategy. “Managing content creation distinct from
distribution will allow us to be more effective and nimble in making the
content consumers want most, delivered in the way they prefer to consume it,”
Chapek, who took the company’s top job in February, said in a separate
statement. In a statement on Monday, Loeb welcomed Disney’s revamp of its media
and entertainment structure. “We are pleased to see that Disney is focused on
the same opportunity that makes us such enthusiastic shareholders: investing
heavily in the (direct-to-consumer) business, positioning Disney to thrive in
the next era of entertainment,” Loeb said. Under the changes, Disney’s studios,
general entertainment and sports business would come under one division while
distribution and commercialization would fall under a separate global unit. Disney
said its creative teams would develop and produce programming for streaming and
traditional platforms, and the distribution group would decide where customers
would see it. Chapek told CNBC there would be layoffs as a result of
“centralization” of functions but did not say how many. Kareem Daniel, formerly
president of consumer products, games and publishing, will oversee Disney’s new
media and entertainment distribution group, the company said. Alan Horn and
Alan Bergman will continue to head Disney’s studio operations, which will
manage programming from big franchises including Marvel, Star Wars, Disney
animation and Pixar. Peter Rice will run general entertainment programming and
Jimmy Pitaro will oversee sports. AT&T T.N, which debuted the HBO Max
streaming service in May, reorganized in August to combine its film and TV
operations under one studio head to better compete in the streaming media wars.
Disney said it would hold an investor day on Dec. 10 to provide more
information about its strategy.
^ Hopefully
this will help Disney make more movies and shows for Disney+ while at the same
time making more movies and shows for regular Disney. ^
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