Disney Considering Sale Of ABC, Other TV Networks Except For ESPN

Will Disney offload ABC and other networks?


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FAH1223

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Disney CEO Bob Iger opened the door to selling the company’s linear TV assets as the business struggles during the media industry’s transition to streaming and digital offerings.

Iger appeared Thursday on CNBC, the morning after the company announced it would extend his contract by two years through 2026. He returned to the helm of the company in November after Disney’s board ousted Bob Chapek with a two-year contract through 2024 and plans to find a next successor.

“After coming back, I realized the company is facing a lot of challenges, some of them self-inflicted,” Iger told David Faber at Allen & Co.’s annual conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, noting he’s accomplished a lot of work in seven months but there’s more to be done.

At the top of the list is assessing the traditional TV business, Iger said. Disney owns a portfolio of TV networks, from broadcast station ABC to cable TV channels like ESPN.

Disney is going to be “expansive” in its thinking about the traditional TV business, leaving the door open to a possible sale of the networks. “They may not be core to Disney,” Iger said, adding the creativity that has come from those networks has been key for Disney.

On Thursday, ABC News President Kim Godwin to employees expressed support for Iger’s contract extension, according to a person familiar with the matter. Godwin encouraged ABC staffers to focus on their work and audience, the person added.

An ABC News spokesperson declined to comment.

Cable TV channel ESPN is in a different bucket, however. On that front, Iger said Disney is open to finding a strategic partner, which could take the form of a joint venture or offloading an ownership stake.

Iger said when he had left the company he had predicted the future of traditional TV and had been “very pessimistic,” and has found since his return that he was right in his thinking, adding it’s worse than he expected.

When Iger last spoke with Faber in February, soon after announcing a major restructuring at the company, he said that he felt “a sense of obligation” to return to Disney and that his preference was to stay for his two-year contract.

“We’ve gotten a lot done very quickly, significant cost reductions and significant realignment of the company,” Iger said. “But dealing head on with some of our biggest challenges.”

The appearance in February came shortly after Disney announced a sweeping restructuring that included thousands of layoffs and billions of dollars cut in spending.

The reorganization warded off a potential proxy fight with activist investor Nelson Peltz.

Disney reorganized into three segments: Disney Entertainment, which includes most of its streaming and media operations; an ESPN division; and a parks, experiences and product unit.

These were some of Iger’s most significant actions in the months after his return. Disney revealed it would cut $5.5 billion in costs, consisting of $3 billion from content, excluding sports, and the remaining amount from noncontent costs. The company earmarked 7,000 layoffs.

In addition to looking for his next successor, Iger has been tasked with bringing Disney’s streaming business to profitability. In the last year, media executives across all companies have focused on how to make streaming profitable, particularly after behemoth Netflix lost subscribers early last year and since instituted an ad-supported tier and a crackdown on password sharing to drive revenue.

While the company posted revenue and profit in line with Wall Street estimates last quarter, it saw a loss of 4 million subscribers at its flagship streamer Disney+.

Those subscriber losses were offset by price increases, which Iger said in May weren’t to blame for the lower numbers. Instead, he said it showed room for further increases when it comes to streaming, and pushing customers toward the ad-supported tier, with the aim of reaching profitability.

In an effort to bulk up Disney+ and attract more subscribers to its cheaper, ad-supported tier – which it launched last year – the company announced last quarter it would add Hulu content to Disney+.

Disney has been weighing whether it should buy all of Hulu, as it owns 66% and Comcast owns the rest. It’s likely Comcast will sell its Hulu stake to Disney at the beginning of 2024, CNBC previously reported.

Iger said Thursday that since he returned to Disney, he ultimately concluded the company is “better off having Hulu.”

He added the combined Hulu and Disney+ offering would be available by the end of the calendar year, and the upcoming negotiations with Comcast over valuation wouldn’t prevent that.

“The combination of those apps is designed to obviously help the [streaming] business become profitable,” Iger said.

Disney is scheduled to report its fiscal third-quarter earnings after the market closes Aug. 9.

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal, which includes CNBC.
 
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IIVI

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I think a large part of this is social media like Tiktok.

A lot of people consume content from regular people now as entertainment rather than big companies' presentations. It's crazy how much everything from music to sports has taken a backseat.

At the end of the day, it goes to show that regular people are pretty entertaining as well.
 
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David_TheMan

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I think a large part of this is social media like Tiktok.

A lot of people consume content from regular people now as entertainment rather than big companies' presentations. It's crazy how much everything from music to sports has taken a backseat.

At the end of the day, it goes to show that regular people are pretty entertaining as well.
No, it has nothing to do with tiktok.
-----------------

Bob Iger spent money like a drunken sailor.
He has disney so debt ridden that they are over extended, this is all his fault.
Overpayed for Fox, he literally bet against himself, and payed 71 bil, when the closest comcast bid was 20bil.
He mismanaged all their assets in film, put idiots over Lucasfilms, got rid of the Pixar braintrust and let idiots run the show, hasn't used fox IPs at all, let Feige destroy the Marvel film brand in 3 years, after 10+ years of building up.
He over spent to get into china, all so that they might get the shanghai park taken from them, and at best have to sell it at a loss.
Put Chapek over the Parks, their bread and butter, and let Chapek nickle and dime the parks, to the point that the quality dropped, you have constantly broken rides at DisneyLand, overpriced food, poor quality workers and resort properties, same in Orlando. So you have a deminished brand in your money maker and neve rrecovered from Covid lockdowns in park revenue and traffic, they wasted money with the Star Wars park, by not using classic locations to base the park and with the stupid galatic cruiser idea that cost 5k a night and didn't even give you a premium experience.

Overall Bob Iger was ove a Micheal Eisner level drop in Disney quality, branding, and overspent just as bad as Eisner.

You want to know why Disney a family company is doing all that tranny shyt? They need the credit line open for ESG investors to stay alive.
Also keep in mind, with all their debt they still have to pay comcast for their share in Hulu which is around 38 - 42 billion in October.

They might be better off selling off Pixar, Lucasfilms, and possibly Marvel, if they don't course correct.
DisneyLand might be better being sold as raw property in LA than kept open if they are going to leave it in the disrepaired state that it is in.
They have been trying to explore selling DisneyLand Shanghai, but they have to be able to remove their IP from there without the Chinese stopping it and just keeping it open with all their shyt there like its sweet with no recourse.

They are in a very bad spot, and seeing that Iger got them there.


Edit: corrected Fox's purchase price from 40 bil, to 71 bil.
 
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King Poetic

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I think a large part of this is social media like Tiktok.

A lot of people consume content from regular people now as entertainment rather than big companies' presentations. It's crazy how much everything from music to sports has taken a backseat.

At the end of the day, it goes to show that regular people are pretty entertaining as well.

Agree

Like I been saying.. Jerry springer and Maury is on social media in this day and age
 

Easy-E

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Damn just a few years ago people were predicting Disney to take over the world. A few sloppy moves later and they are probably not even churning a profit on what they paid for their properties.

COVID got alot of Entertainment companies smelling themselves and investing heavily in stuff ppl only liked because they were stuck in their houses
 

UpAndComing

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COVID got alot of Entertainment companies smelling themselves and investing heavily in stuff ppl only liked because they were stuck in their houses

COVID times (2020-2022) made alot of assets and businesses very over valued because of the very unique circumstances. Alot of businesses were left holding the bag and now have to sell off assets they bought

All these lay offs in ESPN makes sense now
 

Tribal Outkast

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People sit here on their phones all day and barely turn the tv on… then be surprised by stuff like this lol. Companies can’t survive by just providing tv, they need people to watch it. Ratings factor into ad sales and other stuff. Network tv ain’t gonna make it like that. I’m not surprised at all. You have that then people trying to get paid but failing.. It’s just crazy out here.
 

Tribal Outkast

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COVID times (2020-2022) made alot of assets and businesses very over valued because of the very unique circumstances. Alot of businesses were left holding the bag and now have to sell off assets they bought

All these lay offs in ESPN makes sense now
People really thought we were going to be in the house forever :mjlol:
 

Mister Terrific

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People sit here on their phones all day and barely turn the tv on… then be surprised by stuff like this lol. Companies can’t survive by just providing tv, they need people to watch it. Ratings factor into ad sales and other stuff. Network tv ain’t gonna make it like that. I’m not surprised at all. You have that then people trying to get paid but failing.. It’s just crazy out here.
Kids don’t even watch tv or movies anymore. I ask kids what they watch and it’s always “YouTube”
 
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