Disney, ABC and ESPN status
Posted: Thu Jul 13, 2023 9:29 pm
https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2023/0 ... ick-faldo/
>> Disney is open to pursuing “strategic partners” who could assist with ESPN distribution and content and has had “some conversations” to that effect, Iger said on CNBC Thursday. When asked if such a partnership could take the form of a joint venture or equity stake, he said that is a possibility. Disney currently owns an 80 percent stake in ESPN, with Hearst accounting for the remaining 20.
Iger, who has struck a contract extension to remain Disney CEO through 2026, also strongly indicated that the company is open to selling off its other linear TV properties — including ABC. In discussing the “transformative work” ahead at Disney, Iger mentioned linear television among the company’s “no-growth businesses” and said it will be “expansive” in deciding “what to do about them.”
When asked whether those networks are “core” to Disney, he said “they may not be,” and that Disney would “call it like it is” and be “very objective about their future.”
Notably, Iger specified that Disney looks at ESPN “very differently” from those other linear networks. There has been years of speculation that Disney would consider spinning off ESPN, with the other networks usually escaping notice. (CNBC) <<
WOW!
https://www.forbes.com/sites/willskipwo ... 5b7dc27f01
>> Disney owns a number of TV properties including broadcaster ABC and cable networks like National Geographic and FX, which Iger left open the possibility of selling.
Iger said the properties “may not be core to Disney” and that the company would be “objective” about their future—though he didn’t explicitly say the networks would be sold.
Iger, who previously worked as a senior ABC executive, said linear TV “clearly is a business that’s going to continue to struggle” and the business model is “definitely broken.”<<
IMO - years of substandard bland "non-offensive" to anyone programming (ie Seinfeld could not be made today), a lack of ala cart cable programming and a fantasy that Streaming was going to be different has put the TV/Media industry in a major bind. Add to that a Writers Guild of America strike and another possible strike by the actors’ union SAG-AFTRA are really putting the industry in a pickle. Sports is the only thing people watch and pay for... but is it enough?
>> Disney is open to pursuing “strategic partners” who could assist with ESPN distribution and content and has had “some conversations” to that effect, Iger said on CNBC Thursday. When asked if such a partnership could take the form of a joint venture or equity stake, he said that is a possibility. Disney currently owns an 80 percent stake in ESPN, with Hearst accounting for the remaining 20.
Iger, who has struck a contract extension to remain Disney CEO through 2026, also strongly indicated that the company is open to selling off its other linear TV properties — including ABC. In discussing the “transformative work” ahead at Disney, Iger mentioned linear television among the company’s “no-growth businesses” and said it will be “expansive” in deciding “what to do about them.”
When asked whether those networks are “core” to Disney, he said “they may not be,” and that Disney would “call it like it is” and be “very objective about their future.”
Notably, Iger specified that Disney looks at ESPN “very differently” from those other linear networks. There has been years of speculation that Disney would consider spinning off ESPN, with the other networks usually escaping notice. (CNBC) <<
WOW!
https://www.forbes.com/sites/willskipwo ... 5b7dc27f01
>> Disney owns a number of TV properties including broadcaster ABC and cable networks like National Geographic and FX, which Iger left open the possibility of selling.
Iger said the properties “may not be core to Disney” and that the company would be “objective” about their future—though he didn’t explicitly say the networks would be sold.
Iger, who previously worked as a senior ABC executive, said linear TV “clearly is a business that’s going to continue to struggle” and the business model is “definitely broken.”<<
IMO - years of substandard bland "non-offensive" to anyone programming (ie Seinfeld could not be made today), a lack of ala cart cable programming and a fantasy that Streaming was going to be different has put the TV/Media industry in a major bind. Add to that a Writers Guild of America strike and another possible strike by the actors’ union SAG-AFTRA are really putting the industry in a pickle. Sports is the only thing people watch and pay for... but is it enough?