Disney “Most Woke Corporation in America” According to Recent Survey

Once a year, the American Conservative Values ETF (ACVF) conducts a survey aimed at Conservative Investors to determine what companies investors think misalign with their values. “It’s an ongoing informal survey intended to identify companies with woke or liberal reputations, as well as capture trends over time,” said ACVF CEO William Flaig, one of the group’s co-founders. Typically tech companies like Facebook, Twitter, and Google top the list but not this year.

Disney, overwhelmingly, has been voted “THE most woke company in America” by this group of Conservative Investors. Tech giants Facebook, Google and Twitter made the top five but this is the first time Disney has topped the list. In 2021, Disney ranked low on the list when just 10 percent of ACVF investors ranked it as woke.

CVF President Tom Carter said, “It’s clear Disney’s adoption of left-wing ideology led by its war on parental rights is harming the company’s brand among politically conservative investors.” He went on to say that the ACVF is currently boycotting 29 companies, including Disney, and actively encourages its investors to do the same.

This line of thinking extends past just the ACVF as well. Financial columnist and analyst Steve Beaman said that many investment groups and individual investors are tired of companies (on both sides of the aisle) mixing business and politics. “Corporations need to focus on products and customers along with shareholder returns,” he said. “That should be the main focus, not some agenda involving political and social issues.”

Many conservatives have gone beyond stock boycotts and have boycotted the Parks and films as well due to their increasing frustration with Disney’s involvement in political issues. Disney Fan turned Disney Boycotter, Tara, spoke with me and said, “Disney used to stand for something everyone could love: simple family friendly fun. Now they want to have some sort of mission statement with an agenda and I’m not ok with that. We used to go 3 or 4 times per year. We won’t go again until they stop the woke stuff”

Bob Chapek

Disney Parks 4th Quarter Earnings Call showed signs that the company may be feeling the crunch from these protests. Earnings were well below anticipated estimates and stocks suffered more dramatically than they have in 20 years immediately after the call. The Disney online community continuously comments “go woke, go broke” in protest what they perceive as a “Woke agenda.” While the company certainly won’t go broke, it is possible they may take a step back from politics if these financial trends continue.

Bob Chapek Announces “Targeted Hiring Freeze” at Disney

On November 8, Disney held its Fourth Quarter Earnings Call, and things did not go as well as the company had hoped. Even though Disney recorded a staggering $28 billion in profit, revenue-per-share for Disney+ fell below Wall Street expectations. Disney Parks, Experiences, and Products also underperformed. Not long after the call, after-hours trading began on Wall Street, and, the next morning, it was revealed that Disney experienced a 13% drop in its stock value.

Now, just days after the Earnings Call, Disney CEO Bob Chapek has announced that Disney will begin a “targeted hiring freeze”. That is in addition to job cuts that will also soon take place.

Bob Chapek sent out the following memo to employees, which was shared with CNBC:

Disney Leaders-

As we begin fiscal 2023, I want to communicate with you directly about the cost management efforts Christine McCarthy and I referenced on this week’s earnings call. These efforts will help us to both achieve the important goal of reaching profitability for Disney+ in fiscal 2024 and make us a more efficient and nimble company overall. This work is occurring against a backdrop of economic uncertainty that all companies and our industry are contending with.

While certain macroeconomic factors are out of our control, meeting these goals requires all of us to continue doing our part to manage the things we can control—most notably, our costs. You all will have critical roles to play in this effort, and as senior leaders, I know you will get it done.

To be clear, I am confident in our ability to reach the targets we have set, and in this management team to get us there.

To help guide us on this journey, I have established a cost structure taskforce of executive officers: our CFO, Christine McCarthy and General Counsel, Horacio Gutierrez. Along with me, this team will make the critical big picture decisions necessary to achieve our objectives.

We are not starting this work from scratch and have already set several next steps—which I wanted you to hear about directly from me.

First, we have undertaken a rigorous review of the company’s content and marketing spending working with our content leaders and their teams. While we will not sacrifice quality or the strength of our unrivaled synergy machine, we must ensure our investments are both efficient and come with tangible benefits to both audiences and the company.

Second, we are limiting headcount additions through a targeted hiring freeze. Hiring for the small subset of the most critical, business-driving positions will continue, but all other roles are on hold. Your segment leaders and HR teams have more specific details on how this will apply to your teams.

Third, we are reviewing our SG&A costs and have determined that there is room for improved efficiency—as well as an opportunity to transform the organization to be more nimble. The taskforce will drive this work in partnership with segment teams to achieve both savings and organizational enhancements. As we work through this evaluation process, we will look at every avenue of operations and labor to find savings, and we do anticipate some staff reductions as part of this review. In the immediate term, business travel should now be limited to essential trips only. In-person work sessions or offsites requiring travel will need advance approval and review from a member of your executive team (i.e., direct report of the segment chairman or corporate executive officer). As much as possible, these meetings should be conducted virtually. Attendance at conferences and other external events will also be restricted and require approvals from a member of your executive team.

Our transformation is designed to ensure we thrive not just today, but well into the future—and you will hear more from our taskforce in the weeks and months ahead.

I am fully aware this will be a difficult process for many of you and your teams. We are going to have to make tough and uncomfortable decisions. But that is just what leadership requires, and I thank you in advance for stepping up during this important time. Our company has weathered many challenges during our 100-year history, and I have no doubt we will achieve our goals and create a more nimble company better suited to the environment of tomorrow.

Thank you again for your leadership.

-Bob

Since he stepped into the position of CEO of The Walt Disney Company in 2020, Chapek has become known as a CEO who cuts costs and raises prices. Guests visiting Disney Parks are being vocal about paying more while getting less for nearly everything. Chapek is being held responsible for getting rid of the free FastPass system and instituting Disney Genie+, which varies in cost per day.

During the Earnings Call, CFO Christine McCarthy said that the company was continuing to look for ways to cut costs — leading to the hiring freeze and job cuts. The last time McCarthy spoke at length about cost-cutting, she talked about Disney changing food vendors — opting to go with cheaper ones — and cutting food portions while keeping costs where they are or increasing them.

Disney has not responded publicly to the leaked memo.

Disney Stock Tanks After Bob Chapek Touts “Record Results”

On November 8, The Walt Disney Company held its 4th Quarter Earnings Call. During the call, Disney CEO Bob Chapek offered a very positive outlook on the numbers, calling this year some of Disney’s “best storytelling yet” and reports revealed that Disney had made a mind-boggling $28 billion profit. Chapek also revealed that Disney added more than 12 million subscribers to its Disney+ and streaming platforms worldwide and that the streamer was still on target to be profitable by 2024.

Disney Parks, Products, and Experiences were some of the most profitable areas for Disney, but that could simply be because Disney is charging sky-high prices and offering less, so, naturally, Guest spending will be up.

Even though Disney+ added millions of subscribers, the “revenue-per-user” came in under what analysts were predicting. Disney also shared that Disney+ subscriber growth is expected to fall in the next quarter. Disney’s consumer products numbers also came in below expectations, which caused Disney’s stock to take a massive hit after the Earnings call. The stock market as a whole took a slight hit, but Disney seemed to get hammered.

Here’s more on Disney’s underperformance and what could have caused it, via MarketWatch:

Disney executives blamed a number of factors for the revenue miss, including lower content sales because they had fewer theatrical films on the calendar; underperformance of the parks and media divisions; and seasonality of its fourth quarter, which tends to be the lowest for margins.

In a conference call Tuesday afternoon, though, Chief Financial Officer Christine McCarthy suggested that revenue and profit growth will slow to single digits on a percentage basis in the current fiscal year, missing Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts’ average revenue projection for Disney in the new fiscal year suggested revenue growth of about 13.9% and operating-income growth of roughly 17.4%, according to FactSet.

After-hours trading saw Disney’s stock take a 10% drop before finally closing down 6.8%. When regular trading ended, the stock was only down .5%, so the Earnings call is most likely responsible for the hard hit.

It has been a rough year for Disney, whose stocks are down more than 35% from last year’s numbers.

What Comes Next for Disney Acquisitions

Under the direction and leadership of former Disney CEO Bob Iger, the company went on an impressive buying streak. The number of properties Disney-owned properties expanded at an explosive rate. For those keeping track at home of the Walt Disney Company’s quest for world domination, in addition to Disney branded content, the company owns Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm, ESPN, 20th Century Studios, Hulu, ABC, 21st Century Fox, Touchstone Pictures, Hollywood Records, A+E Networks, Searchlight Pictures, National Geographic, Hollywood Pictures, and a whole slew of non-Disney branded hotels in California. That’s…a lot. It seems like, eventually, Disney is going to own everything, so what’s next?

Well, nothing, actually. During his sit down with the Wall Street Journal, current CEO Bob Chapek said, “We have the best creative teams, the best brands, and franchises in the world,” said Chapek, speaking at the WSJ Tech Live 2022 conference Wednesday. “We’re quite happy to have the output level across our channels without having to be a buyer in the open marketplace. At this point, our plan is to have all our content creation self-contained.”

That means they aren’t looking to buy anything new for the foreseeable future. This could be because the company is trying to make up for COVID losses, or it could be that they intend to pour their creative dollars into their in-house streaming network, Disney+.

The latter certainly seems to be the case as Chapek expressed full confidence in Disney+ and its ability to beat out the rest of the competition, saying that “not everybody who’s out in the marketplace today will survive. This is a critical-mass business. Scale is really, really important to be able to thrive.” He believes Disney+ has that scale and will become the ‘must-have’ streaming service even as others around it falter, which he predicts will happen soon.

The CEO also said that Disney was currently in a great position in terms of content creation. After shutdowns and restarts from the pandemic, the company can “finally reach some level of stability in terms of producing content at the right cadence,” according to Chapek, “now we can very thoughtfully plan the amount of content we need for each channel without over producing or under producing.”

ESPN bets

As for whether he intends to sell off any of the brands they currently own? Not likely. When specifically asked about ESPN, which activist investor Dan Loeb recently recommended they sell off, Chapek expressed his desire to keep current assets, especially ESPN. “To the sports fan, it is the power brand out there,” Chapek said, adding that “There are dozens of companies that would love to have that.”

Bob Chapek

Time will tell whether Disney is done acquiring new properties for good or if this is a temporary strategy, but for now, it’s a safe bet that Batman won’t join the House of Mouse any time soon.

Disney Appologizes Over “Offensive Joke”

Disney recently apologized for a joke they made in an internal newsletter. A dad joke is a regular feature in Stay Connected, the internal newsletter for Disney General Entertainment. This time, however, it seems the joke of the day offended people in not just one but two different ways!

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The joke said, “My four-year-old son has been learning Spanish all year, and he still can’t say the word “please” which I think is poor for four.” They later sent out an apology after apparently receiving complaints about the play on words stating, “In today’s Stay Connected newsletter, there was an inappropriate joke. It was never our intention to marginalize a language or a young person’s learning skills, and we apologize to anyone offended. We strive to maintain a sense of belonging and uphold our belief in diversity, equality, and inclusion within the company. We will do better.”

It’s unclear exactly who was offended by the joke or if Disney was simply attempting to be proactive by issuing the apology. The original memo and apology both made their way to Twitter, and as usual, Twitter had some thoughts on the matter.

One user astutely commented that comedy is impossible in today’s world, with a nod to Orwell’s novel 1984:

Disney apologizes for joke

Another made an attempt at comedy themselves:

Disney apologizes for joke

Still, some believe it was a publicity stunt:

Disney apologizes for joke

While others perhaps took the joke a bit too seriously:

Disney apologizes for joke

Meanwhile, one user found something entirely different to be offended about:

Disney apologizes for joke

Others blamed “wokeness” for the apology and, it seems, took some joy in what they considered to be poetic justice:

Disney apologizes for joke

It seems, like all things, opinions on the subject were varied. Most commentators were simply confused as to why the “dad joke” warranted an apology in the first place. The joke and subsequent apology can be found here:

Disney General Entertainment forced to apologize for…I’m not really sure what. Remember, you can never be woke enough so it’s always better not to try. pic.twitter.com/qJHHnbN4xA

— Karol Markowicz (@karol) October 5, 2022