• Will Josh =?ISO-8859-15?Q?D=92Amaro?= blow the $60 Billion dollar Disney Investment?

    From mummycullen@mummycullen@gmail-dot-com.no-spam.invalid (MummyChunk) to rec.arts.disney.parks on Tue Oct 1 22:19:41 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.disney.parks

    From HR

    On Aug. 10, some 12,000 of The Walt Disney Co.As most ardent fans
    gathered in AnaheimAs Honda Center waiting with bated breath. The
    entertainment giant was in the middle of its biennial D23 conference,
    and Saturday night was the flagship event for DisneyAs Experiences
    division, where chairman Josh DAAmaro would lay out the companyAs
    long-term plans.

    What followed was part concert, part panel and part Apple keynote,
    with musical performances from the likes of Meghan Trainor, Shaboozey,
    Rita Ora and Plain White TAs; appearances from Billy Crystal, Ke Huy
    Quan and John Stamos; and even a Steve Jobs-ian epilogue, with DAAmaro
    wrapping things up (some attendees were seen darting from their seats
    to the exits) before the Magic Mirror from Snow White appeared behind
    him, leading to a mic-drop moment with the news that Disney was
    building a land at Walt Disney World dedicated to iconic Disney
    villains.

    A month later, the highlights from that evening were on full display
    in front of thousands more people, this time in the form of a sizzle
    reel, as DAAmaro took the stage at the Inbound Conference in Boston on
    Sept. 18.

    oThese fans, they travel from all over the world to attend D23 because
    they are incredibly loyal, and they follow every single move that we
    make,o DAAmaro told the crowd of marketing executives. oTheyAre
    looking for every bit of news that we have to share, and we gave them
    an almost overwhelming amount of that news just last month.o

    Sitting in his green room backstage at the Boston Convention Center,
    DAAmaro said that delivering that cascade of new projects at D23 was a
    overy, very proud moment.o

    oIt comes from just the massive investment that we have put into
    making sure that we represent our fansA biggest wishes,o DAAmaro said.
    oFor me to be able to stand up onstage and present that in the form
    that we did, the energy coming back at me and the company, by virtue
    of that, was phenomenal.o

    But it was also a long time coming.

    A year ago, the company gathered Wall Street analysts at Disney World
    in Orlando and shared some significant news: The company was
    committing $60 billion to expand the division, nearly doubling its
    capital expenditures over 10 years.

    Disney, however, remained coy on how it planned to deploy that cash,
    teasing onew storieso and added capacity at both its parks and cruise
    line division.

    It was at D23 that the strategy burst into the open.

    Disney would build a flurry of entirely new lands and attractions
    around the world, including the villains land in Florida, as well as a Monsters, Inc.-themed land. The long-discussed Avatar land would come
    to California Adventure, as well as a near-doubling of the parkAs
    Avengers Campus. And new rides would roll out across its parks,
    including attractions based on Coco, Encanto, The Lion King, Cars,
    Indiana Jones and Robert Downey Jr.As Tony Stark.

    DisneyAs parks division, after all, is where oyouAre taken right out
    of the real world and we put you inside the story,o DAAmaro told the
    Inbound audience.

    oThese experiences are an investment in new ways of telling stories
    for brand new generations of Disney fans,o he added. oWe absolutely
    have to get this right, and so that means how we tell these stories is incredibly important.o

    ItAs a big, bold bet, with tens of billions of dollars on the line.

    And it comes as Disney is trying to transform itself while
    simultaneously figuring out who will lead the company into the future.
    Disney CEO Bob Iger is under contract through 2026, but both he and
    the companyAs board are said to be laser-focused on finding a
    successor.

    DAAmaro is seen as one of the leading internal candidates, alongside
    Disney Entertainment co-chair Dana Walden. The executive, however,
    insists that he is osquarely focusedo on pulling off his own
    divisionAs transformation and expansion.

    The Walt Disney Co. knows full well how important its parks and
    experiences business is, not just to its balance sheet, but also its
    future.

    DisneyAs experiences division, like the rest of the company, is
    undergoing both an evolution and a revolution in response to the
    transformative changes impacting the larger entertainment industry,
    and it is adapting accordingly.

    The guiding light for the company, however, remains Walt DisneyAs
    legendary 1957 diagram, with the ocreative talent of studio theatrical
    filmso at the center, and everything else spilling out from that
    central core, from TV and books to music and Disneyland. The corporate
    flywheel has expanded since then (there are now a lot more theme
    parks, plus cruise ships, TV studios, streaming services, sports,
    etc.) but the basic principle is the same.

    DAAmaro showed the diagram in his Inbound presentation, telling the
    audience that oweAre still following this model that Walt created
    today. Stories are at the center of everything that we do, theyAre the
    creative engine for our entire company.o

    And so those stories are now at the center of his divisionAs ambitious expansion plan.

    oI think we start with the fact that there is no other company in the
    world that has such a treasure trove of stories to tell, weAre
    incredibly fortunate in that regard,o DAAmaro tells The Hollywood
    Reporter, adding that the company also listens to what its fans want.
    oOur fans have points of view, they have things they want to see come
    to life. Monsters, Inc. was a great example of that, you heard the
    reaction at D23, our fans want that.o

    And, increasingly, it seems that DisneyAs creative talent wants it as
    well.

    At D23, DAAmaro was joined onstage by the likes of Marvel Studios
    chief Kevin Feige, Lucasfilm executive Dave Filoni, Pixar chief Pete
    Docter, and Frozen creator and then-Disney Animation CCO Jennifer Lee
    to announce new projects. He also participated in scripted moments,
    including a spirited routine with Billy Crystal, who voiced Mike
    Wazowski in Monsters, Inc.

    oThese people are my friends. Jennifer Lee is my friend, Kevin Feige
    is my friend, we know one another, and weAre spending a lot of time
    together,o DAAmaro says, framing the internal conversations about
    where to put their resources as oa bit of an art and a science.o

    The art, of course, comes from the creatives, who built characters and
    worlds that resonate with consumers (during his Inbound presentation,
    DAAmaro showed a video of himself and Lee exploring the Frozen land at
    Hong Kong Disneyland), and the science comes from understanding what
    each distinct audience wants.

    Consider Zootopia. The 2016 animated film formed the basis for a new
    land that opened late last year at Shanghai Disneyland. The company
    knew it wanted to expand that park, and internally, DAAmaro recalls
    debates about what franchise would make sense for a new land. Zootopia
    was at the time the highest-grossing animated feature ever released in
    China, garnering more than $220 million at the box office there. While
    it was successful in the U.S., in China, it was a blockbuster.

    oThis is a franchise property with characters that resonate in this marketplace, itAs a film that we knew we were going to continue to
    invest in, and itAs also a world that the Imagineers knew with all
    their hearts they could bring to life,o DAAmaro says. oThis story
    works with these fans, theyAre coming in droves. TheyAre coming and
    saying they specifically came here to visit Zootopia.o

    Those internal deliberations, the give and take between the creative
    side and the business side, are behind every major investment.

    oOur creative communities, including Imagineering, is always alive and
    bubbling with ideas and concepts and brainstorming. In fact,
    Imagineering, I donAt think, has ever been more alive and more excited
    about the future than they are right now,o DAAmaro says. oWhat that
    basically means is that there are ideas that are being thrown on the
    table all of the time, and weAre debating which of these ideas will
    resonate most with our guests. Which of these can we translate into
    something thatAs going to bring that story to life in a new form, or
    take it in a new direction? What are our fans asking for?

    oAnd we deliberate that, whether itAs with Jen Lee or Kevin Feige or
    [Lucasfilm chief] Kathy Kennedy, we debate those things vigorously in
    a healthy way, and then internally, even at WDI, to make sure that
    weAre landing on the best possible option to tell the stories that we
    want to tell,o he adds.

    That can sometimes cause anxiety among Disney fans. After D23, some
    Disney park regulars grumbled that a pair of new Cars rides coming to
    the Magic Kingdom would replace Rivers of America and Tom Sawyer
    Island, and expressed concern that the Monsters, Inc. land might
    displace a popular Muppets-themed attraction.

    But it is a path Disney has gone down before. When Disney shut down
    California AdventureAs Twilight Zone: Tower of Terror ride and
    reopened it in 2017 with a Guardians of the Galaxy theme, for example, ridership increased significantly, despite the risk associated with
    making big changes to a beloved attraction.

    Or as Morgan StanleyAs Ben Swinburne wrote Aug. 13: oThese
    experiential investments can only generate compelling returns if they
    leverage popular and relevant IP: As Disney investors prepare to
    underwrite a rising capital spending outlook a confidence in the
    returns available is anchored in DisneyAs ability to continue to build
    new brands and franchises while injecting new life into existing IP.o

    DisneyAs Imagineers also have a track record of creating their own IP.
    Rides like Pirates of the Caribbean and Jungle Cruise have since been
    turned into feature films. And onstage at the Inbound conference,
    DAAmaro brought out two BDX droids, remote-controlled robots that
    debuted at the Star Wars: GalaxyAs Edge land at Disneyland earlier
    this year. They were never in a Star Wars film or TV series, but they
    feel like a part of the larger universe.

    Thanks to their advanced animatronics (and human controllers), the
    droids are able to emote and engage with visitors. oThese guys are technological marvels, but it is more than that. ItAs what Imagineers
    do with that tech that takes it over the top,o DAAmaro said.

    oIt wouldnAt actually surprise me if you were to see these guys in a
    Star Wars movie someday,o he added (itAs worth noting that thereAs a Mandalorian movie coming in 2026). oThat would be a full-circle
    moment.o

    The executive has a few full-circle moments, and they inform how the
    company approaches its projects.

    Onstage, DAAmaro shares an anecdote about his own first Disney
    experience. He grew up in Medfield, just a few miles outside of
    Boston, and his parents were in the Boston Convention Center crowd to
    watch him speak.

    He recalled a trip to Disneyland with his family as a kid. His father
    took him on Peter PanAs Flight, one of the parkAs original
    attractions.

    oI remember my pop saying before we arrived at Disney: aJosh, it
    really feels like youAre flying when youAre on this attraction, youAre
    not going to believe it,Ao he recalled. oYou know what? He was
    right.o

    Some 30 years later, DAAmaro took his own kids on a newer attraction
    at Disneyland: SoarinA, which sees riders lifted into the air as they
    fly above many of the wonders of the world.

    oBefore I took my family, I said, aItAs going to really feel like
    youAre flying, youAre not gonna believe it,Ao he said. oGoing from
    Peter Pan to SoarinA, that didnAt happen overnight, those two
    attractions were about a half century apart, but their connection to
    another one of DisneyAs core storytelling principles, and thatAs
    innovation.o

    Using innovation to create that emotional connection is at the core of DAAmaroAs effort to expand DisneyAs experiences business, and it
    speaks to both the evolution and the revolution facing Disney as a
    whole.

    oBringing new fans in, that creates that generational effect that I
    was talking about [onstage],o DAAmaro says. oWe want to make sure that
    any story that we decide to bring to life u and there were a lot of
    them that we announced at D23 u has kind of an enduring effect,
    something that we know that can stand the test of time and our guests
    will continue to want to participate with, it creates those emotional
    memories that I just talked about.o

    On the evolutionary front, that means building new rides, attractions
    and lands, so that future generations can have the same experience in
    DisneyAs theme parks that DAAmaro and his family had (a good example
    is MickeyAs Toontown in Disneyland, which uses classic IP to appeal to
    families with younger children). But it also means trying to bring the
    Disney experience to new places.

    One piece of that puzzle is DisneyAs cruise line, with DAAmaro
    announcing four new ships at D23. The new ships will essentially
    double the size of DisneyAs fleet by the end of this decade a and many
    of those ships will sail from countries without a Disney Park,
    providing a closer opportunity for families to experience what his
    division has to offer.

    To put some numbers to the cruise business potential, Swinburne wrote
    that the cruise division could have $10 billion in revenue and $3
    billion in EBITDA by 2031. oFor context, the cruise business exiting
    this decade could be larger in EBITDA than ESPN in 2024,o he wrote.

    The revolutionary piece is a bigger gamble. As with DisneyAs
    entertainment division and ESPN, DAAmaro believes that digital is a
    growth business for the part of the company he oversees.

    But while entertainment and sports are laser-focused on the streaming experience, DAAmaro has his sights set on interactive gaming.

    oThis is the future for our company, and itAs going to be an
    incredible space for us,o DAAmaro says.

    When Bob Iger returned as DisneyAs CEO in late 2022, he met with
    DAAmaro and Disney games chief Sean Shoptaw.

    oThe first thing they showed me were demographic trends,o Iger told
    CNBC earlier this year. oAnd when I saw Gen Z and Gen Alpha and even millennials, I saw the amount of time they were spending in terms of
    their total media screen time on video games, it was stunning to me,
    equal to what they spend on TV and movies.

    oThe conclusion I reached was we have to be there and we have to be
    there as soon as we possibly can in a very compelling way,o he added.

    The result was a massive deal with Fortnite studio Epic Games, with
    Disney investing $1.5 billion in the company, and partnering to create
    an interactive universe based on DisneyAs characters and properties.

    DAAmaro describes what the company has planned as oa place where you
    can play games, a place where you can be social, a place where users
    can generate their own content.

    oWe envision essentially a universe that weAre going to build where
    all our stories can come to life. They can come to life in different
    forms, [like] games. They can come to life in ways that you can just
    interact with and play with the franchise in a way thatAs meaningful
    to you, a place where you can actually build,o he adds. oAnd we think
    that this is going to be a place where all fans can come and interact
    365 days a year.o

    The big bet is that consumers who engage with this universe will
    create their own Disney experiences, manifesting an entirely new way
    to interact with the brand and its characters. Just as streaming has
    changed the way that Disney fans watch their favorite stories, the
    company is betting that the new Epic Games universe can change the way
    that they experience those stories.

    Onstage, DAAmaro framed the Epic Games bet as being true to the vision
    of Walt Disney himself, noting that the founder was an oadventurero
    and a orisk-taker.o

    oWe should never rest on past success. We should always look for the
    next big idea, the next big challenge. If weAd always relied on what
    worked in the past, the Walt Disney Company might not exist today,o he
    said. oAs consumer preferences continue to shift, we have to adapt, or
    we are going to be left behind.o

    That digital pivot also comes as DisneyAs parks division u after
    seeing double-digit growth over the past few years post-pandemic u has
    seen its revenue moderate in recent months. It was still up 2 percent
    in the companyAs fiscal Q3, but Disney CFO Hugh Johnston warned that
    odemand moderationo will be present over the next few quarters.

    While the softness is across the sector (at UniversalAs parks revenue
    fell by 10 percent in the quarter), it nonetheless adds a sense of
    urgency to the current moment.

    Ultimately, MoffettNathanson analyst Robert Fishman argued in an Aug.
    13 note that the pain is likely to be temporary, particularly with
    what the company has lined up post-D23.

    oWhile investor focus understandably remains on the near-term trends
    at Parks, we think these announcements combined with the recent
    content success highlight the depth and breadth of DisneyAs premium
    I.P. that plays a crucial role in its content flywheel to power
    long-term earnings growth,o Fishman wrote.

    The hardest part might just be meeting the expectations of DisneyAs
    legions of fans, the people gathering by the thousands in Anaheim to
    cheer on the announcement of a Greatest Showman musical, or a new
    Disneyland parade, let alone a new theme park attraction or
    interactive world.

    oThis is going to challenge us, weAll have to approach our stories in
    brand new ways, which means that weAll be applying all these
    principles to ensure this dynamic new universe exceeds our fansA
    wildest expectations,o DAAmaro said onstage.

    Those expectations are most obvious inside Disneyland, Walt Disney
    World, Disneyland Paris, Shanghai Disneyland and all of the other
    places where the companyAs creativity merges with the real world.

    When DAAmaro was named president of Disneyland in 2018, he joined his predecessor Michael Colglazier in Walt DisneyAs old apartment in the
    park, continuing a tradition among its leaders.

    In the apartment, they cooked chili and grilled cheese sandwiches, two
    of WaltAs favorites.

    oWe actually made it on WaltAs own hot plate, just like he used to do
    when he was in the park,o DAAmaro recalled, adding that they stood on
    WaltAs patio and watched guests walk by. oAt that moment, I must admit
    that I felt the weight and the responsibility that I was taking on,
    because Disney fans, they take their fandom very, very seriously.o

    If DisneyAs studios are its creative engines, powering the stories
    that move the company forward, DisneyAs experiences are its emotional
    core, taking those characters and lands and bringing them to life to
    form lasting bonds with fans. ItAs Walt DisneyAs flywheel, as
    articulated some 66 years ago, where every part of the company
    delivers a different piece of the puzzle, now with $60 billion backing
    it.

    oDisney is at its best when the whole company converges into one,o
    DAAmaro says. oThis is the Disney difference. ItAs why I think the
    company is so special.o

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