‘It’s Time To Break Up Disney,’ Says Author Of New Book On Monopoly Power In America

Authored by cartoonbrew.com and submitted by cloudycane
image for ‘It’s Time To Break Up Disney,’ Says Author Of New Book On Monopoly Power In America

Matt Stoller, author of Goliath: The Hundred Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy and former senior policy advisor and budget analyst for the U.S. Senate Budget Committee, has written a persuasive essay about why the Walt Disney Company should be broken up. He won’t be the last person to make this case.

Stoller lays out a detailed argument on how Disney, in its fifteen years under the leadership of CEO Bob Iger, has turned into a “vertically integrated global monopolist over entertainment” that engages in anti-competitive behavior and significantly reduces choices that consumers have in the marketplace, while hurting the careers of creators. Writes Stoller:

As I’ll show, the new Disney is more a private equity group than studio, collecting brands and using them to bargain aggressively with partners, suppliers and consumers. Imperial Disney is the result not of animation genius but mergers and acquisitions genius. It is not a corporation that pushes the bounds of artistic and technological possibility but a corporation that pushes the bounds of legal possibility under the radical pro-consolidation framework that has existed since the 1990s, as well as the Clinton-era ‘engagement’ framework that encouraged deep integration of American multi-nationals into China.

The article touches on a lot of different topics, each of which could be delved into more deeply, from the Disney Company’s abuse of copyright powers to the way that the company limits consumer access by creating artificial scarcity, and from how Disney demands coercive terms from theater owners that show its films to how the corporation has become a willing mouthpiece for Chinese propaganda.

TheBrixster on November 6th, 2019 at 06:42 UTC »

I’m all for getting rid of large companies but Comcast has far more power than Disney does and yet I don’t hear a peep about them. They control most of the internet and own multiples news networks and movie studios.

swissch33z on November 6th, 2019 at 05:37 UTC »

Let's start by strengthening the public domain.

SalukiKnightX on November 6th, 2019 at 05:20 UTC »

While Disney’s sudden rise is indeed troubling. They are no worse than AT&T (a telecom owns DirectTV, CNN, DC Comics, HBO, TBS, WarnerMedia, half of CW and the largest media archive in the US) and Comcast (the largest cable and ISP in the country owns NBCUniversal (which itself owns Universal Studios, DreamWorks Pictures (Animation is under Comcast proper), Parks & Resorts, NBC, CNBC & MSNBC) and is a shareholder in MGM Holdings).

All Disney has is content, ABC, ESPN, the 20th Century Pictures/Fox Films/20th Century Fox archive, Marvel Comics, Pixar, Lucasfilm (including Industrial Light & Magic), Radio Disney, Disney Channel, the global theme parks and the archives of Buena Vista Distribution/Walt Disney Pictures.

The issue with them is that with recent acquisitions this decade, not to mention success never seen before in the box office, they’ve become this movie juggernaut the world over. It’s easy to forget they were nearly going into bankruptcy in the 70’s and 80’s as well as having major flops in their own studio prior to these acquisitions remember Mars Needs Moms, Tron: Legacy or John Carter? Even this year, the first movies they’ve inherited in the TCF deal have been stinkers.

Edit: Gold and Silver (both are a first in my near 10 years with Reddit)... I’m speechless. Thanks!