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| This is INTERCOT's WebDisney, The Definitive Guide To Disney Information & Disney Web Sites. WebDisney currently has <%=sites%> sites in our online directory for your surfing pleasure! |
| March 31, 2004 |
| Shades of Green Opens
After a $92 million expansion, the U.S. Army will reopen its military-only Walt Disney World resort today with twice as many hotel rooms -- and almost no traces of its once-unionized work force. During the temporary closing, the Army contracted out many of the jobs once held by union members. And despite a promise that ex-employees would be given hiring preference when the resort reopened, union members have had little luck getting their old jobs back.
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| Disney Sees Princess Toy Sales Rising Over 50%
Walt Disney Co. is enjoying fairy tale results from its line of Princess dolls and toys for girls with sales set to rise more than 50 percent this year. The forecast offers a glimmer of good news in a division battered by falling sales of the Disney Stores currently up for sale. Moreover, chief executive Michael Eisner can point to the royal success of Princess toys to help fend off critics who claim he has mismanaged the company and stifled creativity.
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| March 30, 2004 |
| Disney Announces Home on the Range for Game Boy Advance
Disney Interactive, a publishing label of Buena Vista Games, Inc., today announced Disney's Home On The Range for Game(R) Boy Advance, a western adventure unlike any other. Based on the Walt Disney Pictures' animated feature film Home On The Range, coming to theaters nationwide on April 2, the Game Boy Advance title picks up where the movie left off, putting players in a fast-moving, action-packed race across the West as they track down, outmaneuver and capture renegade outlaws.
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| March 29, 2004 |
| New Disney Chairman's Dual Roles Draw Criticism
The Walt Disney Company recently split the jobs of CEO and Chairman, and had ended business relationships between the company and outside directors. That hit former U.S. Senator George Mitchell's own pocket. As a Disney director, he had netted $300,000 in consulting fees. But the flow continued elsewhere. Regulatory filings show that after Mitchell stopped receiving the fees from Disney, he continued to earn them from other boards on which he sat. And that has prompted some governance experts and investment-fund officials to question his sincerity for reform and sensitivity to appearances.
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| March 27, 2004 |
| Disney World Raises Ticket Prices
Walt Disney World announced the biggest ticket-price increase in the last 15 years an adult ticket to any of its theme parks on Friday. On Sunday, the price of a one-day, one-park adult admission will increase $2.75 to $54.75, before tax, restoring Disney's title as owner of Central Florida's most expensive collection of theme parks. Some experts say that the record price increase is another signal that the flagging tourism-based economy is on the mend.
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| Disney Leaders to Hold Forum
In their first united appearance since the resignation of Michael Eisner as chairman, top Walt Disney Co. executives will appear together next week. Questions will be hosted Thursday by Credit Suisse First Boston's Bill Drewry, the company said late Friday. Among the executives will be Chairman George Mitchell, CEO Eisner; President Bob Iger and theme park division chief Jay Rasulo.
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| March 26, 2004 |
| Roy Disney Presses for Eisner Ouster
Roy E. Disney on Friday pressed his campaign to force Eisner's ouster and other management changes. "Michael Eisner is behaving like a Third World dictator of a once-great country ... and his Cabinet sits mute for fear of beheading," Disney said in a speech to a gathering of pension fund officials and other large investors. "What will it take for the board of The Walt Disney Company to listen and to act?"
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| Roy Disney to Share Information to Advance Revolt
Roy Disney, the Walt Disney Company shareholder trying to oust Chief Executive Michael Eisner, tried to tighten ties with other dissidents on Friday by offering to share information. Roy Disney said his family company, Shamrock, would work with like-minded investors. "Shamrock will share ideas and information" with the state pension funds and others, he said, declining to give details.
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| Roy Disney: Morale at All-time Low
Company morale at Walt Disney Co. is at an all-time low, dissident shareholder Roy Disney charged Friday, calling again for Chief Executive Michael Eisner to step down. "Without the support of the employees, how can the CEO get the company back on track?" he asked, saying Eisner is a "lame duck CEO."
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| Disney Studio Chief Sees Big-Screen "Toy Story 3"
Walt Disney Company studio chief Dick Cook said on Friday he was leaning toward making the third installment of "Toy Story," Pixar Animation Studios Inc.'s 1995 hit, as a feature movie rather than a straight-to-home video project in a few years.
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| The Overleveraged Disneyland: Will Disney Take Losses in France?
WHEN the Walt Disney Company decided to build a Disneyland in Europe, it was clever in many ways - perhaps too clever. It managed to build first one, and then a second, theme park largely with other people's money while not showing any of the loans on its own balance sheet. If all had gone well, it would have shown profits without much in the way of expenses.
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| March 25, 2004 |
| Disney Director Estrin Says Board Backs Management
Walt Disney Company director Judith Estrin reaffirmed the embattled board's support of Chief Executive Michael Eisner, telling a group of major shareholders the current leadership is best for Disney. In her speech and when talking with reporters later, she declined to provide specifics about the entertainment company's plans to return to a level of growth that will calm shareholder unrest over a number of issues, including performance of the stock price and the future of Disney's creative firepower.
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| March 23, 2004 |
| Disney Brings the Magic of Friendship to the U.S. with the Launch of W.I.T.C.H. Books
Disney Publishing Worldwide announced today that it is launching W.I.T.C.H., a tremendous new book series for tween girls that has seen extraordinary global publishing success, in the U.S. market. An emerging girl property, W.I.T.C.H. is already the fastest growing girls' comic magazine in the world, published monthly in over 64 markets and in 27 languages. Nine W.I.T.C.H. books will be introduced in the U.S. beginning in April 2004 published by Hyperion Books for Children. The first title will offer a hybrid format that combines four-color comics with a traditional chapter book.
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| March 22, 2004 |
| Disney CEO Foes Expect Vote to Show Worker Support
Walt Disney Company dissidents planning their next move against Michael Eisner expect final results of the shareholder vote this month will show that most employees in the company pension plan oppose Eisner. The result of the March 3 annual meeting vote is still being certified, and Disney declined to comment before the final count.
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| Euro Disney Says Debt Waivers Extended
Euro Disney has reached an agreement to extend by two months waivers with its creditors, the French theme park operator said on Monday. The waiver agreement, originally due to run until March 31 and designed to give the company time to resolve its financial difficulties, would now run until May 31, the company said in a statement.
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| Disney Online is Honored with Three 2004 Parents' Choice Awards
Disney Online, part of the Walt Disney Internet Group and creator of the number one kids' entertainment and family community destination, has been awarded three Parents' Choice Awards by the Parents' Choice Foundation. The awards recognize Disney.com, FamilyFun.com and SurfSwellIsland.com for product excellence.
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| Walt Disney Internet Group to Unveil Its First 3D Wireless Game at CTIA Conference: Tron 2.0 3D
The Walt Disney Internet Group (WDIG) announced today that it is currently developing its first 3D mobile game, Tron 2.0 3D, based on the award-winning PC game from Buena Vista Interactive. The game will be shown for the first time at the CTIA Wireless 2004 conference in Atlanta, March 22-24, and is slated to be among the first 3D mobile content released later this spring as 3D capable phones launch in the U.S. The title will be available for both QUALCOMM's Brew(TM) solution and the Java platform.
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| Investors Claim CEO Eisner Misfired on Offer for Angels
Donald Watkins' failed bid to buy baseball's Anaheim Angels is at the heart of a lawsuit filed by shareholders against the Walt Disney Company. The suit, filed in Los Angeles, claims Chief Executive Officer Michael Eisner and the Disney board ignored Watkins' legitimate offer to purchase the Angels last year and cost the company $30 million.
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| Eisner is Wake-up Call For Firms
Should Walt Disney Co. chief Michael Eisner stay or go? Whatever the answer, there's no debate about the need for the company he leads to plan for his replacement. Succession planning, a concept many corporate boards historically have ignored or sloughed off, is now a hot topic in corporate-governance circles.
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| March 18, 2004 |
| Reedy Creek, Firefighters Break Impasse
After two years without a contract, the two sides reached a tentative deal with a mediator's help. But as the sometimes bitter negotiations stretched on -- hurting morale in this tightknit department and delaying pay raises -- New and his colleagues weren't convinced leaders of the Reedy Creek Improvement District felt the same way. A solution seemed distant, until a sudden breakthrough early Wednesday. Following a 16-hour session with a federal mediator, Reedy Creek and the firefighters union reached a tentative agreement on a new three-year contract. The old one expired in December 2001.
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| March 16, 2004 |
| Disney World Grants Wish for Part-time Staff: A Raise
Thousands of part-time Walt Disney World employees would receive their first raise in nearly four years under a proposed union pact announced Monday. The tentative agreement between the company and officials with the Service Trades Council, a group that represents 6,100 part-time Disney workers, would bump up starting pay for part-timers from $6.35 an hour to $6.70. It would also guarantee raises of between 2 percent and 3 percent per year through 2007 for part-time workers, union officials said. The agreement covers all types of employees -- from hotel workers to costumed characters -- who work less than 25 hours weekly.
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| March 15, 2004 |
| French Court Frees 'Nemo' from Lawsuit
A French court has turned down an injunction against selling merchandise for the movie "Finding Nemo," ruling that there were no "serious similarities" between the Walt Disney Co./Pixar character and a clown fish drawn for a French children's book. The case was brought by lawyer and part-time author Franck Le Calvez, who claims to have penned a book about a clown fish called Pierrot about nine years ago. In the preliminary ruling, judge Louis-Marie Raingeard found that there was no possible confusion between the two characters.
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| UK Shop Worker Bags $1 Million Disney Book Deal
A British supermarket manager who wrote a fairy tale as a bedtime story for his children has sold the film rights to Walt Disney Co. for one million dollars. After 11 years' writing and more than 30 rejections from publishers, Clive Woodall's novel "One for Sorrow: Two for Joy" was published on Monday amid the sort of hype normally reserved for big names like JK Rowling.
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| For Disney's Embattled Chief, a Double Rebuke From Fidelity
Fidelity Investments, the nation's largest mutual fund company and one of Disney's largest shareholders, voted at the Disney annual meeting to withhold votes for Michael D. Eisner, the chief executive and then the chairman as well, Disney confirmed last week. Fidelity's vote expressing a lack of confidence would have been stinging enough, but the fund family also administers Disney's multibillion-dollar 401(k) retirement plan. The odd result: for Disney employees investing in Fidelity mutual funds with Disney stock, their shares were used to deliver some pointed criticism of Mr. Eisner's leadership.
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| March 12, 2004 |
| Disney Plan to Sell Stores, Ducks Presses Forward
The Walt Disney Company is plodding ahead with plans to sell two money-losing units -- its Disney Stores and its Anaheim Mighty Ducks hockey team -- despite the distractions of an unwanted takeover bid and a revolt by unhappy shareholders. Both auctions stalled last month to varying degrees, but the iconic media and entertainment company continues to hold discussions with prospective buyers, people familiar with both situations said.
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| Caterpillar, Disney Settle Trademark Suit
Caterpillar Inc. and the Walt Disney Company settled a trademark infringement lawsuit Thursday that claimed a direct-to-DVD comedy released last year taints the heavy equipment maker's image. Terms of the settlement were not revealed in a brief order approved by U.S. District Judge John Gorman.
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| March 11, 2004 |
| Disney's Mitchell Says Board to Oversee Strategy
Newly elected Walt Disney Co. Chairman George Mitchell said on Thursday that the embattled company board would help develop strategy and continue planning for a successor to Chief Executive Michael Eisner.
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| Disneyland's Big Thunder Mountain Roller Coaster Re-opens
Disneyland on Wednesday reopened its Big Thunder Mountain Railroad roller coaster, which crashed last September, killing one man. State safety regulators approved the ride as ready for service after an inspection this week, and the first coaster pulled out of the station at about 3 p.m. PST on Wednesday.
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| March 10, 2004 |
| The Magic Is Gone
Why are investors so furious with Michael Eisner? It's not just the stock price. The faithful think his singular focus on marketing has cost the company its soul
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| Disney Renegotiating Eisner's Contract
The Walt Disney Company is renegotiating Chief Executive Michael Eisner's contract to have him retain a salary of $1 million even though he no longer has the chairman role, the New York Times said on Wednesday. Eisner would retain most of the benefits of his current contract, the story said, citing a person close to the negotiations.
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| March 09, 2004 |
| Iger Defends Mitchell Appointment
Walt Disney Company President and Cheif Operating Officer Robert Iger dismissed criticism Tuesday that new chairman George Mitchell might be too close to management and said the company would focus on improving its networks and animation division. "The board's reputation is on the line ... shareholders come first before any relationship the board may have with management," Iger said during a media and entertainment conference in West Palm Beach, Florida. Iger added, "Iger said it was "reprehensible" to suggest Mitchell won't be impartial.
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| Disney's Iger Expects Higher Comcast Bid
Walt Disney Company President and Chief Operating Officer Bob Iger said on Tuesday that he felt that a new and higher bid to take over the entertainment conglomerate from Comcast was "inevitable". Disney's board on Feb. 16 rejected the original $47.7 billion all-stock offer from the nation's largest cable operator, but Comcast has indicated it still wants a deal -- at the right price -- and said so in a presentation on Monday.
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| Disney to Make Movies From Judy Blume Books
The Walt Disney Company, author Judy Blume and independent producer Jane Startz have agreed to make movies based on Blume's hit kids books like "Are You There God? It's Me Margaret," Disney said on Tuesday. Blume's books have sold over 75 million copies in 26 languages worldwide. Six of her titles are among the top ten all-time, best-selling children's books. Startz's producer credits include the upcoming "Ella Enchanted" for Disney unit, Miramax Films, "Tuck Everlasting" for Walt Disney Pictures and "The Mighty" for Miramax. First on the development list will be "Deenie," about a young teenage girl seeking to define herself beyond the wishes of her parents. Financial details of the deal were undisclosed.
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| Comcast Gives Disney a Digital Dig
Comcast CEO Brian Roberts, speaking at the Bear Stearns media conference in Palm Beach, Florida, said that he has no intention of recklessly mortgaging his company in a do-or-die raid of the Walt Disney Company. Speaking for the first time since the takeover bid was offered last month, Roberts delivered this message to Disney shareholders: Technology is going to transform your business. Join us now or the revolution may overwhelm you, even if our financial proposal hasn't. Roberts stressed that by wedding Comcast's distribution technology and "theater" of 22 million homes with Disney content, the company could "accelerate the change that we fundamentally believe is happening to TV in this country."
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| Eisner Takes His Case to Employees
Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Michael Eisner, faced with sagging morale within the ranks, sent an e-mail Monday to about 70,000 employees, saying current management is positioned to lead the company into an era of prosperity.
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| March 08, 2004 |
| Disney's Brand is Potential Gold Mine
The Walt Disney Company shareholder revolt and the resulting dip in stock price did little to change the company's position on one issue...it's value. In turning down Comcast's pitch, the Disney board left open the possibility of entertaining another bit...that is if it is "reasonable." However, when it comes to Disney, whose reputation for family entertainment is world famous, just what is reasonable? Disney has become one of the most-recognized names on the planet -- a name that parents have learned to trust. It's this reputation, experts say, that will ratchet up the price for Comcast or any other potential suitor.
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| ABC Under Disney: Kingdom, Yes. Magic, No
"The Apprentice" has saved NBC's Thursday night lineup, turned around its season and added millions of dollars in profit...it's also a show that could have belonged to ABC, a network that needs a big hit more desperately than any other. Mark Burnett, who after his success with "Survivor'' and now "The Apprentice'' is the most sought after producer of reality shows, first offered his new series to ABC. But negotiations there quickly turned into an effort to force down the price, and he turned to NBC. The story of how ABC missed out on "The Apprentice" is being pointed to by television industry executives and producers like Mr. Burnett as an example of how the network has been hamstrung creatively and financially by the top-down management style of ABC's parent, the Walt Disney Company, and its chief executive, Michael D. Eisner.
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| March 07, 2004 |
| Eisner's Ability to Lead Doubted
Walt Disney Company CEO Michael Eisner has wielded almost unchecked power over the company for 20 years, serving as emperor of the vast entertainment empire. With last week's stunning no-confidence vote, that reign is likely coming to a difficult close according to some experts. Even if the former chairman can hang on as CEO until his contract expires in 2006, management and leadership experts think that the public rebuke will make it difficult for Eisner to continue as a legitimate leader. Some have claimed that the shareholder rebellion has left Eisner as an emperor with no clothes.
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| Eisner, Stewart Pay For Their Sins
Commentary by Jon Friedman -
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| Lessons from Martha and Mike
How the mighty have fallen! Who would have thought that the once powerful but now pitiful Martha Stewart would be convicted by a jury of her peers and face the prospect of prison? Who would have thought that so many other previously unassailable executives face much the same fate? Or that so many corporate pooh-bahs are having their power stripped away? There is, for instance, the arrogant Michael Eisner, Disney's (DIS: news, chart, profile) mouseketeer in chief for the past 20 years, fighting for his corporate life. A stunning 43 percent of the votes cast at the annual meeting this past week called for him to be thrown off the board of directors, the very same pliant body that he previously had played like a flute.
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| March 06, 2004 |
| Eisner Focus May Mask Bigger Disney Issue
At least 1,000 shareholders gathered in Philadelphia this week stood and cheered when Roy E. Disney called for the removal of Disney Co. boss Michael Eisner. But during the nearly three hours senior Disney executives took to outline their plans for growth, many shareholders abandoned the hall to sip coffee and wait for what they came for - to see how many people would withhold their votes from Eisner as Roy Disney had asked them to.
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| March 05, 2004 |
| Report on Tuesday's Save Disney Rally
INTERCOT's own Ian (WDWacky) Mitchell attended the SaveDisney.com rally in Philadelphia a few days ago and he took some copious notes (over 15 pages) that which he summarizes for everyone on the INTERCOT Discussion Boards.
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| Disney Critics Persist, Call For Succession Plan
Walt Disney Co.'s critics on Thursday urged the company's board to plan for a successor to Chief Executive Michael Eisner, calling his removal from the chairmanship a cosmetic change that ignored an unprecedented shareholder protest. Investors also debated whether Comcast Corp's $49 billion takeover bid would gain momentum after the Disney board unanimously backed Eisner's leadership as CEO, and he made it clear that he would stay on until his contract expires in 2006."
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| March 04, 2004 |
| Roy Disney & Stanley Gold Call Board Move a 'Betrayal of Trust'
Dissident shareholders Roy Disney and Stanley Gold said Thursday that directors of the Walt Disney Co. (DIS) are guilty of a "betrayal of trust" by keeping the embattled Michael Eisner on as chief executive. Eisner was stripped of his chairman title and replaced with presiding director George Mitchell, who Roy Disney and Gold also wanted removed from the board. Gold and Disney went on to call the move "a significant step backwards for substantive governance reform in America's capital markets."
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| Some Investors Displeased on Mitchell
Some investors are displeased that the Walt Disney board named George Mitchell to replace Michael Eisner as the company's chairman. 'I'm extremely disappointed with Mitchell,' said Cynthia Richson, the corporate governance officer for the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System, which controls 4.7 million Disney shares of stock. While investors are happy that Disney divided the roles of chairman and chief executive between two individuals -- in keeping with recommendations about corporate governance , they are disappointed that the board chose Mitchell because he is perceived by some people as a crony of Eisner."
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| Gates Swats Disney Rumors
Microsoft Corp. will not get involved in any potential acquisition of Disney and is focused on what the software maker expects to be a groundbreaking new product, Chairman Bill Gates said. Gates was responding to a question from Channel Thirteen's Charlie Rose about Comcast Corp.'s recent surprise bid for Disney and about speculation that Microsoft could become involved in a deal as a partner or as a separate bidder. 'We're not going to be involved in it, because we're very focused on software,' said Gates in an interview aired late on Wednesday. "
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| March 03, 2004 |
| Eisner Out As Disney Chair, Stays CEO , Mitchell To Serve As Chair
Walt Disney Co. said late Wednesday that it is separating the chairman and CEO positions, cutting the power of 20-year company head Michael Eisner. The board elected director and former Sen. George Mitchell to serve as non-executive chairman of the board. Eisner will continue to serve as CEO. "While making this change in governance, the board remains unanimous in its support of the company's management team and of Michael Eisner, who will continue to serve as chief executive officer," Disney said in a press release.
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| BREAKING NEWS - Eisner Opposition Vote in the Low 40% Range
This just in from the Walt Disney Company Shareholder Annual Meeting in Philadelphia. Various news sources are indicating that more than 40 percent of shareholders withheld support for the re-election of Chief Executive Michael Eisner to the board of directors of Walt Disney Company. Roy Disney and Stanley Gold say that this is a clear message that Eisner must go.
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| Stanley Gold Predicts 40% No Confidence Vote
Stanley Gold, who resigned from the Walt Disney board late last year, predicted that Disney shareholders would register a 40 percent no-confidence vote against Disney Chairman and CEO Michael Eisner during the company's annual shareholder meeting Wednesday in Philadelphia.
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| TRON 2.0: Killer App Coming To Xbox
Buena Vista Interactive today announced plans to release TRON 2.0: Killer App for the Xbox(R) video game system from Microsoft. Currently in development by Climax's Los Angeles studio, TRON 2.0: Killer App will feature new, exclusive Xbox(TM) Live multiplayer combat, specially designed to deliver gamers a state-of-the-art online multiplayer gaming experience.
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| Disney May Split CEO & Chairman Posts
According to reports in various news services, the board of directors of the Walt Disney Company is considering splitting the posts of CEO and Chairman, both currently held by Michael Eisner. Even though it has been stated earlier by George Mitchell, presiding director that this wasn't going to happen until 2006, sources say that the board will announce this split Wednesday.
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| March 02, 2004 |
| Disney Shelves Jackson "Mickey"
Consider the classic image of Mickey Mouse: yellow shoes, white gloves, red pants. No shirt. Mickey might not be ashamed of a little skin, but his bosses are a little more cautious. The Walt Disney Co. this week quietly shelved a special Mickey Mouse statue designed by Janet Jackson, distancing itself from the singer's performance at the Super Bowl. To celebrate Mickey's 75th birthday last fall, Disney solicited artists and celebrities to personalize 75 6-foot, 700-pound statues of its most famous character.
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| March 01, 2004 |
| Disney & Gold Willing To Return To Board
Dissident former Walt Disney Co. (DIS) directors Roy E. Disney and Stanley Gold are considering a possible return to the board if Michael Eisner is booted as chairman and CEO. The shareholder revolt they helped start has snowballed and is expected to result in the withholding of more than 30% of votes on the re-election of Eisner to the Disney board at the annual meeting on Wednesday. The duo would be "willing" to return but have no interest in running Disney as managers, according to Clifford Miller, managing director at Shamrock Holdings in Los Angeles, which manages the Disney family's investments.
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