Iger takes Disney reins
- Share via
The Michael Eisner-era at the Walt Disney Co., ended Friday when
Robert Iger took the title of chief executive officer and the
responsibility to keep the media giant moving with innovative ideas.
The 54-year-old Iger follows the at-times contentious Eisner, who
lead the company for 21 years, oversaw a renaissance in animation
with such hits as “Beauty and the Beast” and “Aladdin” but who’s
tenure reached a low point at a March 2004 shareholders meeting when
43% withheld their votes for Eisner to continue on the Disney board.
Iger will probably have a honeymoon period of three months -- at
least until the Christmas releases of “The Lion, The Witch and The
Wardrobe” -- before the carping begins on his management of the
company, Jim Hill, an independent Disney historian, predicted.
“The Disney company is an ocean liner,” said Hill, the webmaster
of a site on Disney-related issues. “It will be a year at least until
we see what Bob Iger is going to do.”
Iger came to the Disney family with the company’s 1996 purchase of Capital Cities/ABC where he was the network president and chief
operating officer at ABC Television. He was named Disney company
president in 2000 and announced as Eisner’s successor in March.
So far, it’s been a quiet transition for Iger who comes in on
strong momentum, especially with the successes of ABC, said Gigi
Johnson, a lecturer at the entertainment and media management
institute at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management.
The network returned break-out hits “Desperate Housewives” and
“Lost” this fall, and walked away with 16 Emmy Awards at last month’s
presentation.
The big challenge Iger faces is how to grow a company that is
already very large, Johnson said.
The company made a good move by increasing its exposure in
international markets and investing in current technology, such as
the partnership between ESPN and Sprint to offer sports content via
cell phones, and the recently announced partnership with Verizon to
carry 12 Disney-owned television channels on the Verizon FiOS
high-speed Internet service, Johnson said.
But Johnson wasn’t so sure about Iger’s recent statements that
Disney would cut back its budget for live-action films.
“The challenge is their competitors will move forward with live
action,” Johnson said. “Disney will miss opportunities to create new
brands.”
Eisner, 63, will not fade from the Disney picture. He will remain
on the Disney board of directors and is among the largest individual
shareholders of company stock.
His legacy of early film successes and expansion of the company’s
theme parks will be tempered, however, with missteps, such as the
very public splits with then-Walt Disney Studio head Jeffrey
Katzenberg, who went on to form rival studio Dreamworks, and
then-Disney President Michael Ovitz, which resulted in a lawsuit
whose 2004 trial aired the company’s and entertainment industry’s
dirty laundry.
How visible a role Eisner will take remains unknown.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.