The Guardian Australia

‘There is a lot to do’: Bob Iger outlines vision for Disney as he returns as CEO

- Edward Helmore

Returning Disney boss Bob Iger told employees that he will prioritize creativity and profitabil­ity at a staff meeting at the company’s Burbank headquarte­rs on Monday – outlining a shift from a costly streaming services growth strategy pursued by his predecesso­r, who was dramatical­ly ousted from the company eight days ago.

Iger, 71, held the top Disney job from 2005 to 2020. After a two-year break, he was reinstated after the company ousted Bob Chapek following an earnings report that showed the company lost close to $1.5bn in just three months on its streaming services platform.

“There is a lot to do,” Iger said at the meeting heralding his official return. “Quickly.” His entry was met with an ovation and applause. Iger responded by saying he thought he might cry.

Iger, who purchased Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm and Fox for Disney during his last run as CEO, said that rumors of a merger or hook-up with Apple were “pure speculatio­n not rooted in any fact” and the company would not be looking to make any big acquisitio­ns at any time soon.

“Nothing is forever, but I’m very comfortabl­e with the set of assets that we have,” he said.

The Disney veteran faces a difficult task. He must restore morale at the company, particular­ly at its studio and streaming creative divisions. Disney’s theme park cast members will also need cheering after Disney under Chapek got into a bruising dust-up with Florida governor Ron DeSantis over that state’s “Don’t Say Gay” laws.

Iger said that the company’s LGBT employees are very important and that the company cares deeply about them. But he acknowledg­ed that responding to politics can be challengin­g. “We’re not going to make everybody happy all the time, and we’re not going to try to,” he said. “It’s complicate­d. There’s a balance. We do what we believe is right.”

Prioritizi­ng Disney’s creativity, Iger said he believed working in the office leads to better creativity and teamwork. But he offered no proclamati­on on an end to post Covid work-from-home arrangemen­ts. “There is tremendous value of working in the same place,” Iger said. “I’m going to spend a lot of time here, and I hope it is not lonely,” he added.

But the chief executive also said that he did not plan to lift a hiring freeze at Disney and that the company would take cost-cutting measures seriously. Disney Plus, like other streaming services, has poured billions into content only to find that postpandem­ic lockdowns subscriber­s are expensive to acquire and often difficult to keep.

 ?? Photograph: Phil Mccarten/Reuters ?? Robert Iger was re-instated after the company ousted Bob Chapek following an earnings report that showed the company lost close to $1.5bn in three months.
Photograph: Phil Mccarten/Reuters Robert Iger was re-instated after the company ousted Bob Chapek following an earnings report that showed the company lost close to $1.5bn in three months.

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