Archive for the 'Disney' Category

08
Mar
10

When Big Corporations Act Like Little Kids, Consumers Lose: The PR Battle Between ABC and Cablevision.

That was a close one. Well, actually it was still late.

After apparently two-years of negations broke down and ABC pulled its signals from Cablevision the night before, executives from The Walt Disney Company, owner of ABC, managed to get the Oscars back on at Cablevision a mere 13 minutes after the ceremony began. Still soon enough for 3.1 million viewers to watch Sandra Bullock and the Hurt Locker receive their awards, but too late for consumers to have faith in these two corporate giants. And that’s just if they had the patience to wait.

Oscar parties were cancelled. People travelled to friends’ homes to see the broadcast. And viewership in general was probably down.

It was bad enough that the station broadcast was pulled in the first place. But the real clincher in all of this is the awful PR battle being waged. The following statements, from the Washington Post were repeated over and over in countless media stories.

“Now the only way for their subscribers to get ABC-7 is to ditch Cablevision and switch to a provider that cares about them,” Rebecca Campbell, president and general manager of WABC-TV, said in a statement.

Ouch, that hurts. Especially for those people who have no choice in their programming provider.

“It is now painfully clear to millions of New York area households that Disney CEO Bob Iger will hold his own ABC viewers hostage in order to extract $40 million in new fees from Cablevision,” said Charles Schueler, Cablevision’s executive vice president of communications.

Wow, that is just as bad.

My opinion is that the PR battle should have been waged without the public being hurt. Statements about their support for the community should have taken priority over “how awful the other guy is.” In this era of “turn off the TV and watch it on the computer” both Walt Disney/ABC and Cablevision would be better off trying to support their customers in lieu of letting them get hurt in a battle over who makes more money.

In the end we all got to see Sandra Bullock bring home a well-deserved award. So the night wasn’t a terrible disaster.

Here is a news clip on the issue:

31
Jul
09

“curiouser and curiouser!”

375px-Alice_in_wonderland_Alice

Ok, so Disney yanked the “Alice in Wonderland” trailer from YouTube that leaked a day early. Blogs are abuzz about the negative repercussions of Disney’s decision to pull the video until it was officially released the next day. Claims that the choice may have weakened excitement for the film’s debut, which could in turn lead to a reduced number of ticket sales and negative reviews, seem crazy to me. Here’s why:

1. Disney had planned on unveiling the trailer at San Diego’s Comic-Con International, a comic book and popular arts convention.  They crafted a traveling installation that includes wardrobe (the Mad Hatter’s hair!) and props (the infamous “Drink Me” bottles) from the movie and takes those lucky enough to get a tea party invitation on an enchanted tour of Wonderland. (Check out twitter.com/important date for tea party tweets.) They obviously have an incredible campaign surrounding the movie’s debut. They deserved to release the trailer as planned, when they were good and ready.

2. The controversy that has brewed surrounding the YouTube yank is giving Disney more publicity than if they would have let it slide and left things be. Those who wouldn’t normally have cared about the “Alice in Wonderland” trailer are now watching it because of all the racket.

3. Tim Burton directed the film and Johnny Depp is the Mad Hatter. Everyone knows this duo is a delightfully bizarre combination of talent. March 5, 2010. I’ll be there!

18
Feb
09

Disney Places Product In Its Small World

Disney’s most famous attraction, It’s a Small World, has been retrofitted to include Disney characters throughout its different nations.

WalletPop posted an article yesterday and I have to say it shocked me. I went with my family to Disney World last summer and was amazed at how this ride, more than 20 years after I first went on it, was still able to humble me and make me think about the world’s different cultures. For ten minutes, I sat in silence and found myself in a Zen-like state.

Had I seen Pinocchio hanging from string inside one of Italy’s towers, I am sure the spell would have been broken.

Check out WalletPop’s full-length article, which includes a video of the updated ride. As for you, Disney, thanks for filling our small world with more of your product placement. Was the rest of the park just not big enough for you?




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