Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Disney to cut 7,000 jobs to save in costs

- RYAN FAUGHNDER

Walt Disney Co. this week begins its plan to cut 7,000 jobs as part of a wider effort to rejuvenate the Burbank entertainm­ent giant’s finances and reach profitabil­ity at its streaming business.

The first wave of employees facing job losses will be notified by Disney bosses over the next four days, Chief Executive Bob Iger said in a Monday memo to staff. A second, larger round of cuts will come in April, with “several thousand more staff reductions,” followed by a final group before the beginning of summer.

The cuts are spread throughout the company, affecting roles in the units formerly known as Disney General Entertainm­ent and Disney Media and Entertainm­ent Distributi­on, as well as corporate positions and jobs in the theme parks, experience­s and consumer products business, according to people familiar with the matter.

“The difficult reality of many colleagues and friends leaving Disney is not something we take lightly,” Iger wrote. “For our employees who aren’t impacted, I want to acknowledg­e that there will no doubt be challenges ahead as we continue building the structures and functions that will enable us to be successful moving forward.”

The layoffs were expected. Iger in February said the company would be shedding workers to help save $5.5 billion in costs, in a sign of Hollywood’s retrenchme­nt amid challenges in the business of online video.

The cuts underscore the difficulti­es Disney and other media giants face as they reckon with the realities of streaming, larger economic woes and the challenges facing Iger, the longtime former CEO who took over from the ousted Bob Chapek in November.

The reductions also reflect an uncertain environmen­t for entertainm­ent, media and technology companies that expanded too aggressive­ly during the covid-19 pandemic.

Upon returning to Disney, Iger quickly faced a proxy fight from billionair­e activist investor Nelson Peltz, whose investment firm Trian Fund Management accumulate­d a $900-million stake in Disney and lobbied the company for a seat on its board of directors. Peltz criticized the company for “self-inflicted” wounds, including poor succession planning and the costly acquisitio­n of 21st Century Fox.

Peltz ended his campaign shortly after Iger announced Disney’s cost-cutting plan.

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