Until this behavior costs them revenue, they won't change.
LOL OLD
TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
Their theme park revenue is soaring.M1Buckeye said:CDUB98 said:
Despite all that Disney has done, they're not really hurting, so they have zero incentive to change.
Not true at all. They're stock went down the toilet. Things aren't well at Disney.
Gap said:TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
A couple of questions:
1) Why did you not show the trend going to the bottom and $0 as Disney no longer pays a dividend?
2) Of all the possible financial metrics, why did you choose a dividend chart (albeit without the key changes that has occurred since your graph's time period) as being most relevant to making whatever point you were attempting to make?
A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
There are many things that you and your kids could do/see without having to expose them to Disney's nonsense or supporting that nonsense by giving Disney your money. In fact, you could probably do a couple of different things for the same amount of money it would cost to go to Disney World.A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
And the Hulu deal alone will burn a lot of cash just in debt service, unless they try to use Treasury stock which would roughly translate to 14% of their stock. That wouldn't make Blackrock, Vanguard and other institutional investors very happy either.Quote:
Park revenue be damned if they're buring cash left and right in other divisions every quarter.
aggie93 said:A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
For the same money you can go to Spanish Wells in the Bahamas, best kept secret for families. 2 mile Long Island off Eleuthera where you can get a house on the beach very reasonably and ride around the island on a golf cart. Super safe and friendly with no hotels and very modest tourism. Walk out hundreds of yards to a sandbar at low tide. Swimming pigs. They have a sandbar a mile out with a swing and stingrays you can pet. Great snorkeling and fishing. Blue hole. Island population is descendants of a group similar to the Pilgrims that wrecked a couple hundred years ago and still religious and they make their money on being lobster fishermen. Cook fresh fish or lobster on the grill or go to one of the cool local restaurants.
Way better family experience than the Uber commercial Disney crap.
Science Denier said:Their theme park revenue is soaring.M1Buckeye said:CDUB98 said:
Despite all that Disney has done, they're not really hurting, so they have zero incentive to change.
Not true at all. They're stock went down the toilet. Things aren't well at Disney.
Link
Quote:
It's important to remember this figure included Parks, Experiences, and Products, meaning this revenue stream is not just theme park tickets.
Universal is right down the road and they are quickly passing the mouse up in experience.A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
The issue here is wokeness. There are some very underperforming units in Disney, and they are not the result of wokeness. In fact, the data would support that the more woke they become, the more money they make. At least, that's how it seems to me.Irish 2.0 said:Gap said:TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
A couple of questions:
1) Why did you not show the trend going to the bottom and $0 as Disney no longer pays a dividend?
2) Of all the possible financial metrics, why did you choose a dividend chart (albeit without the key changes that has occurred since your graph's time period) as being most relevant to making whatever point you were attempting to make?
This chart tells a better story. Revenue still nowhere near being back to pre-COVID and no dividend. DIS is in a crisis. Park revenue be damned if they're buring cash left and right in other divisions every quarter.
This sentence to me is just gross and disturbing.Quote:
"This way cast members that might not identify as female can still be part of the process to dress up & style the children without having to refer to themselves as a female Disney character."
Don't let these sickos and freaks deny what YOU want to do for your daughters. Although you might steer clear of a Princess-themed character meal, as I would worry that Belle would come out with a beard and adam's apple, and certainly steer clear of the boutique.A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
BigBrother said:
Weird how only 1 politician I'm aware of wants to fight this battle. Hmm. Who could it be?
Predmid said:Maroon Dawn said:
don't give the mouse a single dime whenever you can
The own a lot of stuff....
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
Good. Put family before politics. The rest of these guys are just virtue signaling.
And I have tried to avoid Disney my entire life simply because I hate amusement parks.
My post was about them being arrogant.Quote:
A couple of questions:
1) Why did you not show the trend going to the bottom and $0 as Disney no longer pays a dividend?
I covered that above.Quote:
2) Of all the possible financial metrics, why did you choose a dividend chart (albeit without the key changes that has occurred since your graph's time period) as being most relevant to making whatever point you were attempting to make?
Before 2030?AggieVictor10 said:TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
They'll go broke soon enough
My kids liked Universal of much as Disney. I haven't been to Disney since my daughters's high school cheer team went for a competition, her senior year. She had a wonderful time but she is 37 this year so it was a long time ago, before all the woke nonsense. We moved from Florida to Texas for work in 1991. While there we went to Disney World often. We always stayed on property, and enjoyed it , but our favorite vacations were, Anna Marie Island/ Longboat Key beach vacations. We did Universal once before we moved and that was fun and not too crowded. There are lots of beautiful places in the US to vacation.Satellite of Love said:Universal is right down the road and they are quickly passing the mouse up in experience.A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
j
The curve isn't immediate.Science Denier said:The issue here is wokeness. There are some very underperforming units in Disney, and they are not the result of wokeness. In fact, the data would support that the more woke they become, the more money they make. At least, that's how it seems to me.Irish 2.0 said:Gap said:TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
A couple of questions:
1) Why did you not show the trend going to the bottom and $0 as Disney no longer pays a dividend?
2) Of all the possible financial metrics, why did you choose a dividend chart (albeit without the key changes that has occurred since your graph's time period) as being most relevant to making whatever point you were attempting to make?
This chart tells a better story. Revenue still nowhere near being back to pre-COVID and no dividend. DIS is in a crisis. Park revenue be damned if they're buring cash left and right in other divisions every quarter.
A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:A_Gang_Ag_06 said:
The problem for me regarding the park is there's really no alternative. This isn't like switching to Miller Lite as opposed to Bud Light.
My kids have never been to Disney world. I want to take them in two years as a reward for my oldest graduating college, my middle one graduating high school, and the littlest one finishing her year in school. It would just be a once in a lifetime thing due to the high cost. What other alternative do I have for an experience like that? Six Flags? Gross.
The idea of giving that money to the mouse kills me but, my desire to see my girls all together having that experience trumps that.
Good. Put family before politics. The rest of these guys are just virtue signaling.
And I have tried to avoid Disney my entire life simply because I hate amusement parks.
A friend of mine went to Disney, it was in the 90's. I don't recall the actual date. He didn't do his research and he ended up going on one of their "gay day", or week or whatever it was. Point is that Disney has been trying to groom our kids for a long ass time. I stopped going to Disney a long time ago, but many have not. Their parks are still extremely successful, despite going "woke" for decades. Maybe the tide is FINALLY turned, but until there is actual evidence of their demise, I'm not buying it.Get Off My Lawn said:The curve isn't immediate.Science Denier said:The issue here is wokeness. There are some very underperforming units in Disney, and they are not the result of wokeness. In fact, the data would support that the more woke they become, the more money they make. At least, that's how it seems to me.Irish 2.0 said:Gap said:TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
A couple of questions:
1) Why did you not show the trend going to the bottom and $0 as Disney no longer pays a dividend?
2) Of all the possible financial metrics, why did you choose a dividend chart (albeit without the key changes that has occurred since your graph's time period) as being most relevant to making whatever point you were attempting to make?
This chart tells a better story. Revenue still nowhere near being back to pre-COVID and no dividend. DIS is in a crisis. Park revenue be damned if they're buring cash left and right in other divisions every quarter.
1. Visionary creates entertaining art.
2. Public finds art and support grows
3. Growth and expansion feedback loop
4. IP sold off to mega corp (I.e Disney)
5. Corp ramps up monetizable products
6. Corp reshapes the products in their image
7. Public interest begins to dry up <- you are here
8. Spend starts to outpace profit
9. Corp reduces their spend
10. IP drained and everyone frustrated.
11. Albatross dropped
Marvel and Star Wars fatigue are setting in. They still bring in big $, but they're on the downslope and will die due to Disney's disdain for the core fan base.
You can see an accelerated version of this in the "Rings of Power."
And all of those IP acquisitions were highly leveraged, incurring a crap ton of debt. Debt service alone consumes a lot of working capital, the life blood of a corporation.Quote:
Not defending Disney, just tapping the breaks on Universal kicking their arse. In the last few years Disney has gone all in on the intellectual property from movies / shows being themed into the park attractions like Universal essentially did from day 1.
TxTarpon said:
Easy to see why they are arrogant.
Quote:
No one will say this was a bad performance, but a little context is necessary. Despite all the hype surrounding The Little Mermaid, and the benefit of a long weekend opening, it failed to top The Super Mario Bros. Movie's opening weekend domestic box office of $204.6 million. Comparing apples to apples, The Little Mermaid made $95.5 million, excluding its Memorial Day take. Ouch.
LINKQuote:
So, to put it another way, The Super Mario Bros. Movie made more than double what The Little Mermaid did over the same period of time. But, the media is presenting The Little Mermaid as some box office record breaker. It's not. Disney remains dethroned as the box office king.
If you'd like to add some more perspective, the estimated production budget for The Little Mermaid was ~$250MM, so that opening sucks ass for such a large budget. That $250MM isn't including marketing costs. The experts in the room think they'll need to make $500-600MM for it to scratch a surface.aggiehawg said:
Another disappointment for Disney, not that the media reports on it accurately.Quote:
No one will say this was a bad performance, but a little context is necessary. Despite all the hype surrounding The Little Mermaid, and the benefit of a long weekend opening, it failed to top The Super Mario Bros. Movie's opening weekend domestic box office of $204.6 million. Comparing apples to apples, The Little Mermaid made $95.5 million, excluding its Memorial Day take. Ouch.LINKQuote:
So, to put it another way, The Super Mario Bros. Movie made more than double what The Little Mermaid did over the same period of time. But, the media is presenting The Little Mermaid as some box office record breaker. It's not. Disney remains dethroned as the box office king.