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Tag: Disney

  • ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Is Coming Soon to Disney+

    ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Is Coming Soon to Disney+

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    It seems that Disney is establishing a new release strategy with Ant-Man And The Wasp: Quantumania. It was first used for Avatar: The Way Of Water, but this seems to be the new normal.

    The former film, Quantumania, unfortunately, has a Rotten Tomatoes score among the lowest of any Marvel film. It sits at a harsh 47 percent, while the audience score is 83 percent. While that likely has nothing to do with any of the release news, it makes sense that throwing it on Disney+ would come as something of an afterthought. That being said, despite the negative critical reception, the film still managed to more than double its budget at the box office.

    Initially, the only news we had on Quantumania’s release was for the physical and digital versions. It had a 60-day window between the theatrical run into the physical release. The digital release came out on April 18, while the Blu-ray and 4K versions of the film are due for release on May 16. The only thing about this release that threw fans off is that there was no news of a Disney+ release date whatsoever. Now why would that be exactly?

    ANT-MAN AND THE WASP: QUANTUMANIA
    Marvel

    READ MORE: 20 Actors Who Were Wasted in Bad Marvel Roles

    Finally we do now know that Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania will be available to stream on Disney+ starting on March 17. That’s according to a tweet from the official Ant-Man Twitter account.

    The next Marvel Disney+ series, Secret Invasion, will premiere on the streaming service on June 21. That will be the first Disney+ Marvel series of 2023, after the company released three full series and two specials in 2022. Unless the company has a surprisingly busy 2023, this year will mark a huge dropoff for Marvel’s TV output.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    The Biggest Marvel Box Office Bombs

    These movies, based on comics released by Marvel, were not hits — and that’s putting it mildly.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Bob Iger Takes Jabs At DeSantis Over His ‘False Narrative’ About Disney

    Bob Iger Takes Jabs At DeSantis Over His ‘False Narrative’ About Disney

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    Disney CEO Bob Iger touted the House of Mouse’s contributions to the state of Florida as he slammed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over his “false narrative” amid his on-going feud with Disney.

    Iger, on Wednesday, aired out the state over its treatment of the company since it took a stand against DeSantis’ “Don’t Say Gay” law, Deadline reported.

    “Does the state want us to invest more, employ more and pay more taxes or not?” asked Iger during Disney’s second-quarter earnings call.

    “There’s .. a false narrative that we’ve been fighting to protect tax breaks as part of this. But in fact, we’re the largest taxpayer in Central Florida paying over $1.1 billion in state and local taxes last year alone.”

    Iger has spoken out against DeSantis in recent weeks, telling a shareholders’ meeting last month that the governor’s moves are “anti-business … but anti-Florida,” as well.

    It followed several actions by DeSantis including his takeover of Disney’s special district and suggesting that a prison could be built near the theme park.

    Disney sued DeSantis in late April as it claimed the governor has been “patently retaliatory, patently anti-business and patently unconstitutional” toward the company.

    The Disney head, elsewhere in his call, “set the record straight” on special districts and their purpose in the state.

    “There are about 2,000 special districts in Florida, and most were established to foster investment in development. It basically made it easier for us and others by the way, to do business in Florida,” he explained.

    “And we built a business that employs, as we’ve said before, over 75,000 people and attracts tens of millions of people to the state. So, while it’s easy to say that the Reedy Creek Special District that was established for us over 50 years ago benefited us, it’s misleading to not also consider how much Disney benefited the state of Florida.”

    He also weighed in on the cause of DeSantis’ Disney grievances.

    “This is about one thing and one thing only, and that’s retaliating against us for taking a position about pending legislation,” Iger said.

    “And we believe that in us taking that position, we’re merely exercising our right to free speech.”

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  • ‘Andor’ Creator Tony Gilroy Stop Work During Writers Strike

    ‘Andor’ Creator Tony Gilroy Stop Work During Writers Strike

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    The WGA writers’ strike continues to affect many film and TV shows currently in production. Tony Gilroy, the creator of and producer for the Star Wars series Andor, for example, he stopped going to the set of the second season of the show since the strike began last week.

    In a statement to The Hollywood Reporter, Gilroy let them know that he had been out for the duration of the strike so far, saying…

    I discontinued all writing and writing-related work on Andor prior to midnight, May 1. After being briefed on the Saturday showrunner meeting, I informed Chris Keyser at the WGA on Sunday morning that I would also be ceasing all non-writing producing functions.

    Gilroy responded after being criticized by another WGA member for supposedly “contributing producing services including casting and music-related duties” during the strike.

    READ MORE: Every Star Wars Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    Last week, it was reported that Disney (owners of Lucasfilm and Star Wars) had informed showrunners on its television series that they were expected to keep working on their shows during the strike, doing whatever was required of them besides actual writing.

    It remains to be seen how the strike will affect production on Andor Season 2. It’s likely we won’t know the stike’s full effect until it is over, and we get a better sense how much time has been lost, and when Andor Season 2 will actually premiere on Disney+. The current WGA strike — the first since 2007-8 — began last week after weeks of futile negotiation between the union and the organization that represents the major Hollywood studios (including Disney).

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    Diego Luna Walking in Andor

    Do you enjoy watching Diego Luna walk around? Then Andor is your new favorite television show.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Stranger Things, Marvel Movie Halted Because Hollywood Won’t Pay Its Writers

    Stranger Things, Marvel Movie Halted Because Hollywood Won’t Pay Its Writers

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    As the writer’s strike enters its second week, the effects of not having some of most important people on set around are already starting to show: two of the biggest projects currently in production—Marvel’s Blade reboot and the fifth season of Stranger Things—have been put on ice (along with loads more movies and shows I’ll get to in a minute).

    What’s the strike about?

    Writers are deservedly fed up with loads of stuff, from the number of exploitative short-term contracts being offered in the age of streaming to low pay to poor residuals to the threat of machine-learning.

    You can read more here

    Posting on the official Twitter account of the Stranger Things writer’s room, the show’s creators, the Duffer brothers, wrote:

    Duffers here. Writing does not stop when filming begins. While we’re excited to start production with our amazing cast and crew, it is not possible during this strike. We hope a fair deal is reached soon so we can all get back to work. Until then — over and out. #wgastrong

    Without its writers or showrunners, production has ground to a halt. Hell yeah. Also downing tools is Marvel’s new Blade movie, which has been shut down and “will restart…production once the strike is over”.

    And those two are far from the only shows and films affected. A ton of live TV, especially late night comedy programs, have already gone dark, with The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon, Late Night With Seth Meyers, The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, and Jimmy Kimmel Live! all having stopped filming.

    And while networks and studios will be fine for a while coasting on material that had already been written and filmed, if the strike continues and that dries up, they’ll be in trouble. And even when the strike is over they’ll still be in trouble, because production backlogs and rescheduling will be an absolute nightmare.

    Of course not every project and studio is hitting the pause button. HBO’s Game of Thrones spin-off House of the Dragon will continue filming, just without its writers, while Amazon’s second season of Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power will do likewise. Disney and HBO are among companies who have also ordered writers back to work, with the latter asking them to perform “non-writing” tasks.

    The Writers Guild of America, the union calling the strike, figures that improving their member’s contracts would cost Hollywood a collective $430 million per year. There are already estimates this strike could do $2 billion worth of damage to the entertainment economy. That might seem like some easy sums, just pay these people what they’re worth, but these strikes are never about the money, they’re about control.

    Solidarity with everyone manning the picket lines, and best of luck with the coming days/weeks/months.

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    Luke Plunkett

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  • Theater’s Accidental Little Mermaid + Transformers Trailer Mashup Rules, Actually

    Theater’s Accidental Little Mermaid + Transformers Trailer Mashup Rules, Actually

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    Image: Disney / Paramount / Kotaku

    The Little Mermaid live-action remake and Transformers: Rise of the Beasts—two of the biggest upcoming movies of 2023—don’t share much in common. However, an apparent film projector accident at a theater showing Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 led to the trailers for the two films playing at the same time. The end result might just be the best movie of the year.

    I’ll say right now that while I’m excited to see the new Guardians film, I’ve got little interest in the live-action Mermaid remake and even less desire to see another Transformers movie that isn’t Bumblebee 2. So I wasn’t expecting to be dazzled when I saw a tweet claiming that a theater had screwed up and played the trailers for both upcoming blockbusters at the same time. I almost didn’t even click to watch the video. I’m so happy I did because what was created by mashing up these two teasers is fantastic.

    In the video uploaded on Friday—which has already gone viral and been reshared all over Twitter—a theater in Tenesse appears to start playing trailers for both Transformers and The Little Mermaid at the same time, with audio of Ariel singing all that can be heard during the entire clip. The weirdest part about all of this is how well the two trailers sync up, which is probably a sign that movie trailers are following similar formulas and pacing guidelines and not some cosmic bit of content creation. But still, fun to watch!

    Fans seem to like the Little Mermaid / Transformers mashup

    At one point during the video, you can hear someone mention that “This looks like the best movie ever” and I’m inclined to agree. At the very least it would likely be more entertaining than Disney’s previous live-action misfires or most of the Transformers films. At the end of the video, you can even hear the audience start to applaud the odd concoction of Disney nostalgia and transforming animals.

    The original poster of the video explained to Kotaku that this odd mashup happened during an evening showing of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 at an AMC theater in Franklin, Tennessee.

    According to Blake Perry, the staff at the theater didn’t say anything afterward and the rest of the trailers were shown without issue. “It was just such a strange coincidence and everyone in my auditorium loved it!!”

    Of course, the question now is if any studio or company involved in this weird bit of accidental crossover marketing will latch on to the viral moment and try to take advantage of it. I can see the Transformers-branded social media accounts posting some fan art of Ariel and Optimus Prime chilling and singing together. In a world where Fortnite brings characters like Batman and Luke Skywalker together with Ariana Grande and Master Chief, it’s not that wild to think the brands might come together to squeeze all the fun and joy out of this odd bit of accidental viral marketing.

    Or wait, is this just a Fortnite teaser? Damn it.

    Update 5/5/2023 4:55 p.m. ET: This story was updated to include more information from the original poster of the viral video.

     

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    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Studios Call AI Conversations “Complicated” as 2023 Strike Heats Up

    Studios Call AI Conversations “Complicated” as 2023 Strike Heats Up

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    Since the Writers Guild of America began striking on Tuesday, they’ve been driving the narrative about the work stoppage. Thousands of writers have spread out across Los Angeles and New York to picket outside the biggest entertainment studios, including Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Netflix. The famous faces who have joined the picket lines and their clever signs—they are writers, after all—have dominated headlines. So, too, has their long list of demands. 

    After the WGA announced plans for the strike on Monday night, it released a document outlining just how far it was from a deal with the studios. According to the two-pager, WGA’s proposal for the regulation of AI on Hollywood projects was met with a rejection from the group negotiating on behalf of the studios, which instead offered to hold “annual meetings to discuss advances in technology.” WGA said that the studios also outright rejected its proposal to establish minimums for the size and duration of writers rooms. The document had its intended effect, riling up writers as they headed out to the picket lines. “When the Writers Guild said here’s what we proposed and here’s what their responses were, it was like, oh my God, we were miles apart,” said showrunner David H. Steinberg from the picket line outside Fox on Tuesday afternoon. 

    Beyond issuing a statement as negotiations broke down, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers remained rather quiet during the first two days of the strike. And the studios it represents have followed suit, directing press inquiries back to the AMPTP. Now they’ve issued a response. 

    In a four-page document dated May 4, the AMPTP—which is led by Carol Lombardini—laid out its argument for why negotiations with the WGA broke down. On the issue of the writers room and the WGA’s request for mandatory staffing and minimum duration of employment—which seems to be a key negotiating point for the WGA—the AMPTP said, “If writing needs to be done, writers are hired, but these proposals require the employment of writers whether they’re needed for the creative process or not….We don’t agree with applying a one-size-fits-all solution to shows that are unique and different in their approach to creative staffing. Some writers are the sole voice of a show and others work with only a small team. The WGA’s proposals would preclude that.” 

    The AMPTP also clarified its position around the use of AI, which has become a hot-button issue in the early days of the strike. “We’re creative companies and we value the work of creatives. The best stories are original, insightful and often come from people’s own experiences,” it said in the document. “AI raises hard, important creative and legal questions for everyone. For example, writers want to be able to use this technology as part of their creative process, without changing how credits are determined, which is complicated given AI material can’t be copyrighted. So it’s something that requires a lot more discussion, which we’ve committed to doing.” 

    The studios are taking issue with writers’ complaints that their jobs have essentially become “gig economy” work thanks to the shrinking size and duration of writers rooms, which has forced them to seek jobs in multiple rooms in one year. The AMPTP said that working as a Hollywood writer “has almost nothing in common with standard ‘gigs’ jobs. For one thing, most television writers are employed on a weekly or episodic basis, with a guarantee of a specified number of weeks or episodes. It’s not uncommon for writers to be guaranteed ‘all episodes produced.’ Plus, writing jobs come with substantial fringe benefits that are far superior to what many full-time employees receive for working an entire year, including employer-paid health care, employer-paid contributions into a pension plan and eligibility for a paid parental leave program.”

    As if to illustrate just how generous the studios have already been, the AMPTP pointed out that its most recent offer to increase minimum wages would equate to an extra $97 million annually for writers. (The WGA had previously said it would increase writers’ pay by $41 million per year.) And it noted that the 46% increase in streaming residuals negotiated three years ago only recently took effect, meaning that writers might not be feeling the full effect of those bigger checks just yet. Vanity Fair has asked the WGA for a response. 

    It’s unclear when the WGA and the AMPTP will resume their talks. WGA negotiating committee cochair Chris Keyser said earlier this week that the writers are prepared to strike as long as it takes to “get the deal that we need to make sure that writing is a viable profession.” AMPTP seems to be arguing that it already is—which means Hollywood might want to settle in for a long work stoppage. 

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    Natalie Jarvey

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  • Wait, Kurt Busiek & Mike Mignola Made A Final Fantasy Comic??!!

    Wait, Kurt Busiek & Mike Mignola Made A Final Fantasy Comic??!!

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    I’m not a full-time comics guy, but I certainly have my favourites. And Hellboy might be my most favourite of all, so to have gone decades without knowing that its creator Mike Mignola worked on a Final Fantasy comic has blown my weekend wide open.

    Famed comics author Kurt Busiek, best known for his superhero work on stuff like Superman and The Avengers, told a story over the weekend on Twitter about a comic he and Mignola teamed up for in the early 90s. “Every time someone starts talking about the unreleased FINAL FANTASY comic I wrote years ago”, he says, “there’s a spate on online news articles and discussion, and they all seem to get the story wrong.”

    I somehow didn’t even know this was a story, so definitely enjoyed Busiek’s recounting of it, which for some will be a correction to older stories that got it “wrong”, but for me is one of the coolest “what if” tales in video game adaptation history.

    Busiek’s retelling was over a number of Tweets, so I’ve pasted the full text below (with a couple of capitalisation edits), but if you want to read them as the site intended you can start here:

    Mike Mignola did great-looking covers for it, but he didn’t draw the interiors. Dell Barras did, and he finished about an issue and a half before the plug was pulled. I think I got three (of four) issues written.

    It was not an adaptation of the game. The project started as an original adventure set in the world of FINAL FANTASY I, but after Disney Comics had approved my outline for it, Squaresoft decided they wanted to tie in to the forthcoming game, now known as FINAL FANTASY IV. I was kinda saddened by this, because…..I liked the story I’d come up with, and I liked that it was about low-level characters who were basically trying to survive, and the new game was about high-ranking people who were in charge of armies and countries and such, which was more confining, but so it goes.

    So they paid me a kill fee for my first outline, and I did a new outline that used the characters from the upcoming game but told a new story in that world, rather than adapting the game. They liked that fine.

    Some folks have said that clearly I hadn’t played FFIV or I wouldn’t have wanted to make changes they didn’t like. That’s true, but it’s because FFIV wasn’t done yet. This was before it had even been released in Japan. I worked off an overall bible and character design art.

    I’ve seen it reported that I’ve said it was a bad comic and that it’s good that it didn’t come out. I’m pretty sure that I said it wasn’t my best work (I had to put it in a hurry for reasons mentioned above) but it was a solid story. And I’ve said FINAL FANTASY fans would…..not like it if it was published today, because they’d bring all their knowledge of the FF lore that’s been built up over the past 30 years to it, and it wouldn’t match that; it’d seem like heresy. But I would have been fine with it coming out back then.

    I’ve seen people saying I wanted to change the character names, because I didn’t understand who they were. The stuff they say I didn’t understand wasn’t in the character descriptions I was given, and for all I know didn’t exist yet. Maybe yes, maybe no. But I asked…..SquareSoft about the names, and they encouraged me to change them, with an eye toward using the new names in the US release of the game. So you can be grateful the comic never happened, or Cid might have been called “Lord Blast” for the past 30+ years!

    SquareSoft started talking with me about hiring me to be their in-house “Americanizer,” because they liked the stuff I was doing. But I’d just moved to a new area, and the job would have meant moving to the Seattle suburbs, and I was ambivalent about that. They may have…..been, too, because for whatever reason, we didn’t talk about that job for very long.

    But if it had come up in 1991, it’d have been part of the whole thing; if it was finished today it’d be this weird out-of-continuity thing that got everything “wrong.”

    The idea these three guys (Barras is perhaps better known for his animation work, on everything from the original Transformers to Spider-Man) could have worked on a Final Fantasy comic, of all things, is interesting enough. The fact we could have had Busiek serve as some kind of Localisation Guy, naming and renaming characters, is even wilder. Lord Blast!

    If you want to see some of Mignola’s covers, issue #4 is here, while another shared by Busiek is below:

    Image for article titled Wait, Kurt Busiek & Mike Mignola Made A Final Fantasy Comic??!!

    Illustration: Mike Mignola

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    Luke Plunkett

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  • Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

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    After months of repeated attacks from Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, The Onion asked Disney World employees how they felt about it, and this is what they said.

    Matt Short, Ride Operator

    Matt Short, Ride Operator

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I’ve heard ‘It’s A Small World’ 74,849 times, so I can handle pretty much anything.”

    Lauren Braunston, Ride Operator

    Lauren Braunston, Ride Operator

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Luckily, I don’t have to worry about it anymore because I’m getting laid off.”

    Becky MacGregor, Cinderella

    Becky MacGregor, Cinderella

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “No! Don’t show my face out of character! They’ll kill me!”

    Bob Iger, CEO

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Without it, I wouldn’t have gotten my job back and gotten to do the thing I love the most: firing people! So I can’t thank him enough!”

    Trevor Ballin, Parking Attendant

    Trevor Ballin, Parking Attendant

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “The Mouse has raised a glistening kingdom from the swamp and commands an empire on which the sun never sets. What can an upjumped tax collector say to the legions of the Mouse? We hear but a breeze.”

    Renee Harrison, Tower of Terror Bellhop

    Renee Harrison, Tower of Terror Bellhop

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “He’s a fool to forget who really chooses the next president.”

    Harrison Cutler, Custodian

    Harrison Cutler, Custodian

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “If only he knew cis kids and trans kids all puke funnel cake the same.”

    Samantha Bodine, Ariel

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “This is already the most miserable, joyless place on earth, so I don’t see how he could possibly make it any worse.”

    Melanie Hothan, Concession Worker

    Melanie Hothan, Concession Worker

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I’m actually nervous about provoking a guy who might run for president but is probably gonna peter out embarrassingly.”

    Chuck Freeman, Mickey Mouse

    Chuck Freeman, Mickey Mouse

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Come for me, DeSantis. I will drink your blood and bathe in your children’s fear.”

    Silas Bennett, Goofy

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Governor DeSantis’ actions are an obvious overreach of executive power and a clear sign that the GOP has abandoned its principles of small government and noninterference in business, HYUCK, HYUCK!”

    Kayla Fayder, Disney College Program

    Kayla Fayder, Disney College Program

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    “Someone seems bitter they didn’t get into the Disney College Program.”

    Ethan O’Sullivan, Baker

    Ethan O’Sullivan, Baker

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    “Feuding with the happiest place on earth is an embarrassingly unimaginative means of establishing yourself as a villain.”

    Rascal, Dolphin

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Eee-eee-eeeeeee-ee.”

    Candice Palermo, Audio Technician

    Candice Palermo, Audio Technician

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    “Surely, there’s a powerless minority group he can persecute instead.”

    Fernanda Burns, Ride Technician

    Fernanda Burns, Ride Technician

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    “I don’t see how he can call us woke with our rich history of antisemitism.”

    Francis Lesseder, Remy

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    “I invite Ron to meet me in the sewers so we can settle this like men.”

    You’ve Made It This Far…

    You’ve Made It This Far…

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  • Disney sues DeSantis, alleging retaliation

    Disney sues DeSantis, alleging retaliation

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    Disney sues DeSantis, alleging retaliation – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Disney sued Ron DeSantis, alleging the Florida governor specifically retaliated against the company over its criticism of the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • “Feels Awful”: Brutal Disney Layoffs Hit an Already Hurting Hollywood

    “Feels Awful”: Brutal Disney Layoffs Hit an Already Hurting Hollywood

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    The drip, drip, drip of bad news in Hollywood turned into a flood this week as Disney began a sweeping new wave of layoffs. By Thursday, 4,000 of the entertainment giant’s employees will find themselves on the job market—if there even is much of one right now. Between months of cuts and growing dread about a possible writers’ strike, the mood around town right now can be summed up as “feels awful,” as one source texted me. 

    Layoffs have been rolling through Disney since last month and are expected to continue through spring as leaders work toward CEO Bob Iger’s stated goal of reducing headcount by 7,000. The majority of workers should know their fates by the end of the week. Cuts have already been made within Disney’s Los Angeles–based film and television divisions, as well as at ABC News and ESPN

    Since making his return as Disney CEO last year, Iger has been tasked with refashioning the 100-year-old entertainment brand for a future where cable television is no longer a cash cow and most audiences watch its programming over the internet. Facing pressure from investors to stanch streaming losses and mount a post-pandemic recovery, Iger said earlier this year that Disney would reorganize the company and cut $5.5 billion in costs, including laying off about 3% of its workforce. Some of the cuts have been strategic, like the elimination of Disney’s approximately 50-person metaverse division. Others have appeared more opportunistic, as when the company laid off Marvel executive Isaac “Ike” Perlmutter, the reclusive (and famously combative) billionaire who spent recent months quietly supporting his friend Nelson Peltz in his proxy fight against Disney. 

    The cuts have been particularly anxiety-inducing for an industry worn out by a decade spent first dodging streaming disruption, then consolidation and COVID, and now a streaming correction. An executive at Warner Bros. Discovery said it best when he told me last fall, “everybody is totally drained and feels burned out” amid the company’s own round of cuts following the merger of Discovery and WarnerMedia. Even Iger—then enjoying his brief retirement (or perhaps not enjoying it much, in retrospect)—acknowledged at the time that it was an anxious moment for Hollywood “because this is an era of great transformation and there are still a lot of unknowns.” 

    Iger’s awareness of the challenges didn’t stop him from having to make his own hard decisions once he was back in the driver’s seat at Disney. The entertainment blog Deadline, which has published a running list of executives’ names, indicates that ABC, Freeform, 20th Television, ABC Signature, Disney+, and Searchlight have all lost team members, and that several top marketing executives have departed as part of a restructuring. “A lot of people are just getting rid of people they’ve wanted to for a long time,” one insider speculates. 

    One of the more notable losses in the latest round of layoffs is Nate Silver, the data guru and founder of ABC News’ FiveThirtyEight. Silver’s expected departure was first reported by The Hollywood Reporter, though he quickly confirmed with a tweet that suggested others from the brand are losing their jobs too. “Disney layoffs have substantially impacted FiveThirtyEight,” he wrote. “I am sad and disappointed to a degree that’s kind of hard to express right now. We’ve been at Disney almost 10 years. My contract is up soon and I expect that I’ll be leaving at the end of it.” At ESPN, two veteran executives were reportedly among the cuts, including ESPN+ general manager Russell Wolff, who will depart in July after 26 years with the cable sports network. 

    Disney has promised that the layoffs—which are not expected to affect hourly workers at its parks and resorts—will be completed by the start of summer, at which point Hollywood will be ready to take a collective breath. But with a writers’ strike threatening to pummel the industry, it might be a while before the unease subsides.

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    Natalie Jarvey

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  • Disney sues DeSantis: Lawsuit claims political effort hurt business for Florida resort

    Disney sues DeSantis: Lawsuit claims political effort hurt business for Florida resort

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    Walt Disney Co. sued Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Wednesday, alleging that the governor has overseen a “targeted campaign of government retaliation” that is threatening the media giant’s operations. 

    The action by DeSantis allegedly “jeopardizes its economic future in the region, and violates its constitutional rights,” according to the lawsuit, which was filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida. 

    The lawsuit comes after a year-long battle between DeSantis and the entertainment company after Disney publicly opposed his “Parental Rights in Education” bill, which prohibits instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in schools. After Disney spoke out against the law, DeSantis sought to gain control of the Reedy Creek Improvement District (RCID), a government entity that oversees the region where the Walt Disney World resort is based. 

    But Disney made an end run around that maneuver, stripping the RCID’s board of most of its power, a decision that the new chair of the revamped board called “shameful.” Earlier this month, DeSantis unveiled a new legislative push targeting Disney that would void a last-hour agreement the media company made to strip power from his state-appointed board


    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis continues battle with Disney

    04:46

    On Wednesday, the state’s oversight board voided Disney’s development contracts, a move that the media company alleged is “patently retaliatory, patently anti-business, and patently unconstitutional,” according to the lawsuit.

    “There is no room for disagreement about what happened here: Disney expressed its opinion on state legislation and was then punished by the state for doing so,” the lawsuit alleges.

    DeSantis’s office didn’t immediately return a request for comment. 

    Disney underlined its importance to Florida in its lawsuit, noting that it provides the state with $1.1 billion in state and local taxes last year and is one of its biggest employers, with 75,000 employees there.

    Disney “knows that it is fortunate to have the resources to take a stand against the State’s retaliation — a stand smaller businesses and individuals might not be able to take when the State comes after them for expressing their own views,” the lawsuit claims.

    It added, “In America, the government cannot punish you for speaking your mind.”

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  • Former Teen Disney Star Claims ‘That’s So Raven’ Casting Team Was ‘Racist’

    Former Teen Disney Star Claims ‘That’s So Raven’ Casting Team Was ‘Racist’

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    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Anneliese van der Pol, who starred in Disney Channel’s “That’s So Raven”, is speaking out on the “racism” she witnessed amongst the show’s production team during its initial casting.

    The Dutch-American actress, who portrayed Chelsea Daniels on the beloved show, claims that the series lead, Raven-Symoné, was originally cast in a supporting role before she became the lead character.


    READ MORE:
    Raven-Symoné Admits ‘There Were A Lot Of Challenges’ When She Came Out A Decade Ago

    “When I went in to audition, the show was called ‘Absolutely Psychic,’” van der Pol, 38, revealed during Tuesday’s episode of the “Vulnerable” podcast. “It wasn’t called ‘That’s So Raven’ at all.

    “At the time, Raven wasn’t the lead. She was the sidekick. They were looking for a lead and I came in to audition for the lead. I think the character’s name was Molly,” she continued.

    The actress, also known for her theatre work, went on to tell host, fellow child star Christy Carlson Romano, that Symoné landed the “sidekick” role, however, after the production team noticed her unforeseen talent, they decided to make a major change.


    READ MORE:
    Halle Bailey Addresses Racist Backlash To ‘Little Mermaid’ Casting: ‘As A Black Person, You Just Expect It’

    “When they filmed, they realized Raven was the funniest one and had a following, and so they bumped her up to first position, and then they started auditioning people again,” van der Pol explained.

    “I think that was kind of, like, racism at a low level — I guess if that’s even a possibility. They couldn’t really see a black girl leading a show. They only saw her as a sidekick.”


    READ MORE:
    ‘That’s So Raven’ Actor Orlando Brown To Undergo Mental Evaluation To Determine If He Is Fit For Criminal Trial: Report

    “That’s so Raven” centered on Symoné’s character’s psychic abilities as she navigated high school with her best friends, played by van der Pol and Orlando Brown.

    The Emmy-nominated series ran for four seasons from 2003 to 2007. In 2017, the series spinoff “Raven’s Home” premiered with Symoné and van der Pol reprising their respective roles as they navigate motherhood.

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    Melissa Romualdi

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  • Ex-Disney World worker allegedly admits taking more than 500 up-skirt videos of customers

    Ex-Disney World worker allegedly admits taking more than 500 up-skirt videos of customers

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    Orlando, Fla. — A former Walt Disney World employee is facing a charge that he surreptitiously took a video up the skirt of a female customer, allegedly telling investigators he’d done it more than 500 times over the past six years.

    Jorge Diaz Vega, 26, worked at the Star Wars gift shop inside Disney World’s Hollywood Studios theme park in Florida until his recent arrest on one count of video voyeurism, a third-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison.

    According to court records filed by Orange County Sheriff’s detectives, Vega was spotted by a witness shooting a video up an 18-year-old woman’s skirt. She later told security officers she wasn’t aware of Vega’s actions.

    Detectives said Vega volunteered during questioning that he takes the videos as a “guilty pleasure” and showed them multiple examples on his cellphone.

    He was arrested March 31 and released on $2,500 bail. Court records didn’t show if Vega has an attorney and a current phone number couldn’t be located.

    Disney World said Sunday that Vega doesn’t currently work for the company.

    The sheriff’s office deferred until Monday commenting on whether investigators are pursuing more charges against Vega.

    Both the sheriff’s office and Disney declined to say whether they’re working to identify the other women who Vega allegedly took videos of. 


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  • “F–k Him, He Loses”: The Inside Story of How Disney’s Attempt to Buy BuzzFeed Fell Apart

    “F–k Him, He Loses”: The Inside Story of How Disney’s Attempt to Buy BuzzFeed Fell Apart

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    While I receded into a corner, alternately spaced out and laughing hysterically, and while Steinberg begged, Peretti grew even more abstracted than usual. He conducted a kind of Socratic dialogue with Steinberg in which he seemed at times to be talking to himself. He asked why Steinberg really wanted to do the deal, and Steinberg scrambled to give whatever answer would push Peretti toward yes. You just want money, right? Yes, Steinberg said. But is it really money you want? Or is it status? You don’t just want a house—you want it in the right part of the Hamptons, right? Sure, yes, status. Steinberg tried to lead Peretti back toward the wisdom of the deal—but Peretti seemed to be exploring his own motives, wondering what he actually wanted as he towered over Steinberg, laughing. Peretti didn’t seem to care about money, and he had a kind of reverse snobbery about the status money would buy. He didn’t even like the theme parks, Peretti told his appalled deputy. Steinberg was crushed and furious at me and at Frank; he believed, probably rightly, that if the three of us had been unified, we could have brought Peretti along. Steinberg and I both stumbled to bed, convinced Peretti would turn the deal down.

    Back in New York, when the details came in, it became clear that this was an offer that Peretti, almost, couldn’t refuse. Disney was the most admired media company in the world, with a record of well-managed acquisitions like Marvel and Pixar. The price on offer was $450 million with the potential of earning $200 million more, an extraordinary sum for a company that had priced itself at less than half that just nine months earlier, and whose connection to Disney—a company obsessively protective of its image and its wholesome brands—was just a series of posts like “21 Completely Bizarre Moments in Disney History” (number five: “When Donald Duck promoted condoms during WWII”). Iger was persuasive. Peretti, Steinberg, and Lerer met nightly in the latter’s Upper West Side living room, and Lerer heard them both make their cases—Steinberg’s to sell, Peretti’s about the risks of being stifled by Disney and the potential upside he still saw in the company’s independence. Lerer knew Peretti would bridle at being pushed too hard, so he tried to nudge his protégé toward saying yes. The deal really was, by any normal standard, a no-brainer. On October 29, Peretti and Lerer flew back to Los Angeles, this time staying in Lerer’s preferred hotel, the Chateau Marmont. At nine the next morning, they met Iger and Mayer to go back over the details we’d discussed in the same building five days earlier. Then they all shook hands, and at least some of the men left the room thinking the deal was done. And then, on the flight back, Peretti turned to his seatmate: He didn’t think he could do it. Lerer, incredulous and quietly furious, told Peretti to call Iger and end the talks that day.

    Peretti thought it would be more honorable to call it off in person, and so he instead called Iger to say that he wasn’t committed and he’d like to meet again—and suggested they talk after Peretti’s planned speech to Disney’s management retreat in Orlando 12 days later. Peretti was still feeling his old partner Lerer’s anger when he traveled to Disney World in Orlando on November 13 to speak to the company. The event was, for some 250 Disney higher-ups—the people who get to skip the lines at the theme parks—a nearly sacred gathering, running Thursday to Sunday at the sumptuous Grand Floridian Resort. Iger’s smooth public persona dominated the gathering. Executives worked out at 4 a.m. in hopes of running into him at the gym and, if they didn’t see him, returned at 6 a.m. They were the people who ran theme parks in Asia and cruise lines in Europe, and sold content in Latin America and Australia. They signed up for essentially mandatory and strangely competitive sporting events like softball. When Peretti looked down at them from the stage in the grand ballroom, he saw people dressed like their boss, strenuously casual in shorts and collared T-shirts, ready to pretend to be relaxed.

    As they gathered, Mayer mentioned to Sherwood that Peretti had asked to meet privately after the speech, shooting his colleague a quizzical look that said “weird guy.” But if that was how he wanted the signing ceremony to go, that was fine. As they watched Peretti deliver his speech, trepidation grew for the executives who had worked on the deal. While Iger had staged Peretti’s speech in a marquee slot to welcome him to the family, the BuzzFeed founder didn’t seem to have prepared with any special care. There were no particular references to Disney, to his audience, his future colleagues. Those who had watched his speeches on YouTube recognized recycled jokes—his yarns about the Nike email and Black People Love Us! and his slides of corgis. As Peretti delivered one of his standard, edgy monologues—he liked to ask whether Mormons were better than Jews and explain that the real difference was about the quality of their distribution networks—an HR executive blanched and told the person sitting next to her that they might have a problem.

    Peretti knew he could make himself, his investors, and many of the people who worked for him rich. He knew that the decision was still his to make, and while he was leaning against accepting Disney’s offer, he took the stage without quite having decided. But the reception of his speech confirmed his decision. Peretti had never gotten fewer laughs in his life. He had a vision of himself having to explain the internet to these suits for the rest of his career while they stared blankly back at him and missed his jokes. The thing he had valued from the start when he built a company in his own image was freedom—his own and others’, sometimes to a fault. Peretti couldn’t see himself as an officer on this tight ship. He thought of something his old friend and investor Chris Dixon once said to him: Do you know how many lame rich guys there are, and how few people who really build something? Peretti just couldn’t do it. He walked offstage and into a room with Iger and Mayer. There, he told them apologetically that his heart wasn’t in it. The deal was off. There had been a car ready to take him to celebrate; Peretti took it to the airport.

    Iger, who could blow up and regain his cool within seconds, was furious that Peretti had walked away from the deal—and equally puzzled that Peretti had accepted the speaking invitation first.

    “Fuck him, he loses, that company will never be worth what it would have been worth with us,” he said to another executive. But there was no looking back. Four months later, Disney announced it would buy Maker Studios, which helped YouTube stars like the gamer PewDiePie sell advertising, for roughly the same $500 million it had considered spending on BuzzFeed.

    For Lerer, Peretti’s theatrical decision marked the first break with his protégé. Steinberg was heartbroken. He thought Peretti was out of his mind and realized simultaneously that BuzzFeed was Peretti’s company. The next thing Steinberg did, he vowed, would be entirely his own. He started racking up appearances on CNBC, studying how business news got made. Frank and I were relieved by Peretti’s decision, which meant we could go back to making videos and breaking news. We fully believed that the winds of history were at our backs, and that we’d look down at the pittance Disney offered us one day and laugh. And Frank and I weren’t the only ones who admired Peretti’s balls. In Silicon Valley, that self-effacing boldness and egotism were catnip. And the charts of traffic and revenue pointed ever upward. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, legendarily, had turned down a $1 billion offer from Yahoo! in 2006, defying many of his advisers. Peretti could now go and tell his Disney story to the same people, show off his traffic, take their money, and keep growing.

    Peretti’s decision didn’t look like a mistake at first. BuzzFeed and its generation of media—Gawker, Vice, Vox—kept growing, playing central roles in the decade’s culture and news. Even as their revenue numbers began to miss their targets, the growth fueled by Facebook and the sheer sense of destiny kept the hot financial markets open to raise more money, in retrospect, than they’d be worth.

    As their businesses weakened and their brands aged, they rode different paths down the hype cycle. Hulk Hogan and Peter Thiel destroyed Nick Denton’s Gawker empire. Vice, the best brand and the least credible business of the group, has collapsed under the sheer weight of its own $5.7 billion valuation and appears to be ready to be sold off for parts. Vox has steered carefully through the wreckage and recently raised $100 million on terms similar to the ones it was offering in 2014.

    BuzzFeed, which had by then swallowed HuffPost, was the only one to make it to the public markets, riding the very end of the SPAC craze in 2021 to a messy public offering. I’d spent eight years leading a newsroom that, at its best, broke some of the biggest, most serious stories in the world without leaving behind our roots in some of the weirdest parts of the internet. But I was gone by then, writing for The New York Times, where I’d managed to make trouble for various of the other characters in my book, an occupational hazard in writing about media when your sources, targets, and colleagues are the same people. In one of my first pieces, I wrote about Iger’s apparent return to power at Disney as COVID-19 spread— an article that infuriated his successor, Bob Chapek, and led to Iger’s temporary ouster. In one of my last, I wrote about Watson’s Ozy Media, which had gone from fake-it-till-you-make-it start-up tactics to an astounding set of alleged felonies. We covered his arrest this year at my new media outlet, Semafor.

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    Ben Smith

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  • Victoria Alonso and Marvel Reach Settlement Over Firing

    Victoria Alonso and Marvel Reach Settlement Over Firing

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    Victoria Alonso had been a producer for and executive at Marvel for a very long time. She joined the studio back in 2006, well before the whole Marvel Cinematic Universe blew up. When she joined, she became the head of visual effects and post-production. She was an executive producer on the first Iron Man which of course, really got the whole thing kicked off. She also served in various producer roles on films like Iron Man 2, Thor, and Captain America: The First Avenger. She was an executive producer role on The Avengers, one of the highest-grossing films to date. She did so much great work for Marvel that in 2021, they promoted her to president of physical and postproduction, visual effects and animation production.

    With that kind of tenure, it’s hard to believe that she’d end up getting fired, but that’s what happened back in March 2023. Although no real response was given publicly, The Hollywood Reporter was contacted by a source who said that it was a result of her working outside the studio. She produced recent Oscar nominee Argentina, 1985 for Amazon, which apparently was a big no-no. According to their sources, doing so ended up breaching her contract. There may also have been another reason for the firing though.

    Marco Grob, Marvel
    Marco Grob, Marvel

    READ MORE: The Weirdest Marvel Comics Ever Published

    Some reports claim Alonso also clashed with Marvel and Disney over the depictions of certain LGBTQ themes in Marvel movies; like gay pride imagery that was reportedly censored for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania‘s release in Kuwait. Alonso supposedly fought with Marvel and Disney on this issue specifically. Whatever the reason, THR now reports that Alonso and Disney/Marvel have reached a settlement over her dismissal.

    The Worst Marvel Villains

    These Marvel villains were less than marvelous.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • DeSantis appointees vow crackdown on Disney World’s district: “Nothing is off the table”

    DeSantis appointees vow crackdown on Disney World’s district: “Nothing is off the table”

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    The new chair of Disney World’s revamped governing body said Wednesday that it was “shameful” for Disney to sign agreements with their predecessors stripping them of most of their authority.

    “Our board wanted to work with Disney, but Disney decided they didn’t want to work with us. It was Disney’s way or the highway,” Martin Garcia, chair of the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, said at the start of a board meeting.

    Garcia said that the new supervisors, who were appointed by Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, had good intentions about collaborating with the company. And in response, he had a warning about what the new supervisors who now oversee Disney World’s vast Florida holdings might try to achieve in the evolving showdown between the governor and Disney.

    “Nothing is off the table at this point,” he said.

    Among the changes board members made Wednesday were eliminating a planning agency and making the board responsible for future planning. They also said that in the future, they might consider acquiring more land under eminent domain, monetizing the district’s assets to pay off debt, banning COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates, asserting the board’s “superior authority” over the district and exploring new zoning for the construction of affordable housing for Disney workers on Disney World property.

    Disney World required masks and had social distancing protocols in place in 2020 when it reopened after closing for several months in an effort to stop COVID-19’s spread. DeSantis has been a fierce opponent of virus mask and vaccine mandates and has petitioned the state Supreme Court to convene a grand jury to investigate “any and all wrongdoing” with respect to the COVID-19 vaccines.


    Florida governor signs bill putting Disney district under state control

    00:28

    Disney also said last year it would donate almost 80 acres (32 hectares) for the construction of 1,400 affordable housing units by a third-party developer. Hours after the board meeting ended Wednesday, the company announced that groundbreaking would be next year with the first units finished in 2026.

    Retaliation for opposing “Don’t Say Gay” law

    Wednesday’s meeting continued a battle pitting prospective presidential candidate DeSantis and Republican state lawmakers against Disney that started last year when the entertainment giant publicly opposed what critics call the state’s “Don’t Say Gay” legislation, which barred school instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade. In retaliation, Florida lawmakers passed, and DeSantis signed, legislation reorganizing Disney World’s company-controlled government, allowing the governor to appoint the five members of the Board of Supervisors. Disney previously had controlled the board for its 55-year existence.

    Last month, the new DeSantis-appointees claimed their Disney-controlled predecessors pulled a fast one by stripping the new board of most powers and giving Disney control over design and construction at the theme park resort before the new members could take their seats.

    At Wednesday’s meeting, Garcia said the new supervisors last week discovered another “11th-hour agreement” between Disney and the previous supervisors that allows the company to set its own utility rates.

    DeSantis and state lawmakers ratcheted up the pressure on Disney on Monday by proposing upcoming legislation that would require state inspections of Disney rides, which would be an unprecedented move since Florida’s largest theme park operators have been able to conduct their own inspections. The lawmakers also plan to consider legislation that would revoke the agreements between the previous board supervisors and Disney.

    Republican state Sen. Blaise Ingoglia said he had a message for Disney: “You are not going to win this fight. This governor is.”

    Disney has said all agreements made with the previous board were legal and approved in a public forum.

    Disney CEO Bob Iger earlier this month said that any actions against the company that threaten jobs or expansion at its Florida resort was not only “anti-business” but “anti-Florida.”

    The new supervisors have hired a team of high-powered lawyers that includes a former Florida Supreme Court justice to possibly challenge the agreements between Disney and the old board. At Wednesday’s meeting, the attorneys outlined their arguments for why the deals were illegal, claiming they weren’t properly noticed and were self-dealing. They also said a district can’t confer governmental powers to a private entity.

    “Disney engaged in a caper worthy of Scrooge McDuck,” said David Thompson, one of the attorneys.

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  • Netflix is sending its DVD-by-mail business to the Blockbuster graveyard

    Netflix is sending its DVD-by-mail business to the Blockbuster graveyard

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    Netflix Inc. is ending the DVD-by-mail business that first made it a household name and took down Blockbuster Video.

    Netflix
    NFLX,
    +0.29%

    executives announced Tuesday afternoon that the company will ship its last red DVD envelopes on Sept. 29, after 25 years. The business has dwindled in the past decade from more than $900 million in revenue in 2013 to less than $150 million last year.

    “Our goal has always been to provide the best service for our members, but as the business continues to shrink that’s going to become increasingly difficult,” co-Chief Executive Ted Sarandos said in a blog post titled “Netflix DVD — The Final Season.”

    Also see: Netflix stock falls after subscriber growth, earnings forecast miss. But it’s bouncing back on ad plans, shared-password crackdown in U.S.

    Netflix launched as a DVD-by-mail service in an era that relied on physical media such as the discs to watch television shows and movies at home. The DVD business at the time was dominated by Blockbuster, which relied on brick-and-mortar stores that rented movies for a few days and charged late fees if they were not returned on time.

    Netflix offered a different approach, allowing consumers to have a certain number of DVDs mailed to their home and return them at their leisure, which eventually led to the demise of Blockbuster. Eventually, the company began focusing on streaming media directly to consumers, and first offered that service for free to DVD subscribers.

    Co-founder and former Chief Executive Reed Hastings — who announced he was stepping down from that position three months ago — decided to pivot from the successful DVD business to focus on streaming, which wasn’t an easy transition. When he announced that Netflix would sever the DVD and streaming businesses in 2011, effectively doubling the monthly price for consumers who wanted both offerings, it became one of the biggest debacles in Netflix history as consumers raged and canceled their subscriptions.

    While the process was not easy — remember Qwikster? — Hastings’ vision for streaming services won out, with Netflix collecting roughly $31.5 billion in streaming subscription revenue last year, as the DVD business racked up $146 million. Some of the biggest names in entertainment and tech — Walt Disney Inc.
    DIS,
    +0.63%
    ,
    Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +0.75%
    ,
    Warner Bros. Discovery’s
    WBD,
    -1.79%

    HBO, and many more — have followed Netflix’s path, and established streaming as one of the most dominant forms of media consumption.

    For more: Netflix has changed drastically since its IPO —and is worth thousands of times more

    “Those iconic red envelopes changed the way people watched shows and movies at home — and they paved the way for the shift to streaming,” Sarandos wrote in Tuesday’s announcement.

    Netflix stock has also been a winner, despite a decline in late trading following earnings on Tuesday afternoon. Shares have increased more than 1,300% in the past decade, as the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.09%

    has grown by about 167%.

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  • Disney Sees Ron DeSantis’s Prison-Complex Threat and Raises Him a “Pride Nite” Extravaganza

    Disney Sees Ron DeSantis’s Prison-Complex Threat and Raises Him a “Pride Nite” Extravaganza

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    Ron DeSantis has not yet announced that he will run for president in 2024, but when and if he does, there’s a campaign slogan he should definitely consider—Ron DeSantis: If you like petty tyrants, he’s your guy. And we’re guessing Walt Disney would be happy to cover the costs of printing lawn signs and underwriting various merch!

    Yes, in the latest round of the Florida governor versus the state’s largest employer, DeSantis threatened on Monday to punish the company through any array of absurd measures, including building a prison complex next to the theme park. (DeSantis’s threats were obvious retribution for the way Disney outmaneuvered him by passing covenants that rendered his handpicked governing board basically powerless.)

    At a press conference held near Disney World, DeSantis sneered and spoke of the company: “They are not superior to the laws that are enacted by the people of the state of Florida. That’s not going to work, that’s not going to fly.” Then, after announcing that the Republican-controlled legislature would try to change state law in order to subject the theme park to new inspections, he suggested that the land next to Disney World might be turned into a rival park or perhaps a state prison. Oh, and the board he personally installed may look into raising Disney’s taxes too.

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    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    As a reminder, all of this is happening because Disney dared to criticize the wildly bigoted, DeSantis-backed “Don’t Say Gay” legislation last year in Florida, where you’re apparently not allowed to disagree with the authoritarian governor. Even former New Jersey governor and potential 2024 Republican candidate for president Chris Christie recognized the lunacy of DeSantis’s antics, asking, “Where are we headed here now, that if you express disagreement in this country, the government is allowed to punish you? To me, that’s what I always thought liberals did.” Christie added, of DeSantis, “That’s not the guy I want sitting across from President Xi [Jinping] and negotiating our next agreement with China, or sitting across from [Vladimir] Putin and trying to resolve what’s happening in Ukraine, if you can’t see around a corner that [Disney CEO] Bob Iger created for you.” (Naturally, Christie did not mention his own alleged brush with retaliating against people who have differing opinions.)

    Meanwhile, on Truth Social, Donald Trump, DeSantis’s would-be 2024 rival, wrote: “DeSanctus is being absolutely destroyed by Disney. His original P.R. plan fizzled, so now he’s going back with a new one in order to save face. Disney’s next move will be the announcement that no more money will be invested in Florida because of the Governor – In fact, they could even announce a slow withdrawal or sale of certain properties, or the whole thing. Watch! That would be a killer. In the meantime, this is all so unnecessary, a political STUNT! Ron should work on the squatter MESS!”

    On Monday, Disney seemingly responded to DeSantis’s threats by publicizing “Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite,” a two-night event that will be held in June to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community and its allies.

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    Bess Levin

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  • Netflix is sending its DVD-by-mail business to the Blockbuster graveyard

    Netflix is sending its DVD-by-mail business to the Blockbuster graveyard

    [ad_1]

    Netflix Inc. is ending the DVD-by-mail business that first made it a household name and took down Blockbuster Video.

    Netflix
    NFLX,
    +0.29%

    executives announced Tuesday afternoon that the company will ship its last red DVD envelopes on Sept. 29, after 25 years. The business has dwindled in the past decade from more than $900 million in revenue in 2013 to less than $150 million last year.

    “Our goal has always been to provide the best service for our members, but as the business continues to shrink that’s going to become increasingly difficult,” co-Chief Executive Ted Sarandos said in a blog post titled “Netflix DVD — The Final Season.”

    Also see: Netflix stock falls after subscriber growth, earnings forecast miss. But it’s bouncing back on ad plans, shared-password crackdown in U.S.

    Netflix launched as a DVD-by-mail service in an era that relied on physical media such as the discs to watch television shows and movies at home. The DVD business at the time was dominated by Blockbuster, which relied on brick-and-mortar stores that rented movies for a few days and charged late fees if they were not returned on time.

    Netflix offered a different approach, allowing consumers to have a certain number of DVDs mailed to their home and return them at their leisure, which eventually led to the demise of Blockbuster. Eventually, the company began focusing on streaming media directly to consumers, and first offered that service for free to DVD subscribers.

    Co-founder and former Chief Executive Reed Hastings — who announced he was stepping down from that position three months ago — decided to pivot from the successful DVD business to focus on streaming, which wasn’t an easy transition. When he announced that Netflix would sever the DVD and streaming businesses in 2011, effectively doubling the monthly price for consumers who wanted both offerings, it became one of the biggest debacles in Netflix history as consumers raged and canceled their subscriptions.

    While the process was not easy — remember Qwikster? — Hastings’ vision for streaming services won out, with Netflix collecting roughly $31.5 billion in streaming subscription revenue last year, as the DVD business racked up $146 million. Some of the biggest names in entertainment and tech — Walt Disney Inc.
    DIS,
    +0.63%
    ,
    Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +0.75%
    ,
    Warner Bros. Discovery’s
    WBD,
    -1.79%

    HBO, and many more — have followed Netflix’s path, and established streaming as one of the most dominant forms of media consumption.

    For more: Netflix has changed drastically since its IPO —and is worth thousands of times more

    “Those iconic red envelopes changed the way people watched shows and movies at home — and they paved the way for the shift to streaming,” Sarandos wrote in Tuesday’s announcement.

    Netflix stock has also been a winner, despite a decline in late trading following earnings on Tuesday afternoon. Shares have increased more than 1,300% in the past decade, as the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +0.09%

    has grown by about 167%.

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  • Ron DeSantis Ends Disney Feud After Being Given Guest Role On ‘The Mandalorian’

    Ron DeSantis Ends Disney Feud After Being Given Guest Role On ‘The Mandalorian’

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    TALLAHASSEE, FL—Saying he was happy to finally bury the hatchet with the major corporation after months of difficult dialogue, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Tuesday that he had ended his feud with Disney after being given a guest role on The Mandalorian. “I couldn’t be more excited to let bygones be bygones and announce my one-episode stint as Imperial Moff Rego Thalcyon,” DeSantis said of the guest appearance, which consists solely of him delivering the line “Yes, most acceptable” with his arms crossed behind his back as he dispatches an imperial guard to attack a gang of intruders. “Obviously, I never wanted my differences with Disney to spiral out of control like this. So, yeah, it was a blast to spend some time on set, even if it was only for a day. They even let me take a selfie with Pedro [Pascal] and the Grogu puppet. Anyway, check me out on Apr. 19 when the episode airs! And may the force be with you.” At press time, DeSantis was reportedly furious after learning his guest role had been cut for time.

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