Disney Unplugs Metaverse Unit During Initial Round of Layoffs (deadline.com) 39
Disney has eliminated a small business unit focused on exploring the metaverse, part of its initial efforts to reduce its workforce by about 7,000 employees. Deadline reports: About 50 workers were part of the group dedicated to "next-generation storytelling and consumer experiences." Mike White, a former consumer products exec who had been leading the unit, will remain at the company in a yet-to-be-determined role, the source said. On Monday, Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed in a staff memo that the first of three rounds of layoffs is starting this week as the company pushes toward a stated goal of $5.5 billion in cost savings. Word emerged Monday evening of a number of exec departures across the company's general entertainment operations.
Disney was caught in the Metaverse hype? (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh look, another company that isn't falling for the Metaverse hype. Color me shocked! /s
I'm more surprised they even had a Metaverse division in the first place.
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I'm more surprised that they caught on so quickly, usually it takes Disney a few years to figure out that the horse they're flogging croaked a couple miles ago.
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> I'm more surprised that they caught on so quickly
They're no CNN+, but still pretty quick none the less.
launched: March 29, 2022
closed: April 28, 2022
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What's that gotta do with anything?
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If we could get Tucker Carlson to move in with him, the two would implode like matter and anti-matter. *pop*
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So... mod it offtopic and move on with your life, got it.
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I assume they discovered CNN+ was a failure in 1 month. its a joke.
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I'm not really surprised they shut it down instead of figuring out something else for the people to research or develop. Disney doesn't really do anything creative any more.
Glad to see them go. (Score:1)
I'm more surprised they even had a Metaverse division in the first place.
Can you even imagine a more useless group of people than the Disney division of Metaverse creators? I say that as someone who loves the Imagineering division - but that's because they blend fantasy and reality, instead of trying to make things look vaguely real in a bad iteration of a 3D universe.
That had be the easiest firing ever. If I were a manager I'd be sleeping like a baby after that one.
And, let's be honest, not one person th
Re: Glad to see them go. (Score:2)
Yeah. The writing's been on the wall, what with Meta's implosion and scummy stock trading companies dropping metaverse from their adverts. VR has been the next big thing for at least 40 years now.
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Re: Glad to see them go. (Score:2)
Agreed. There's nothing VR does better than existing solutions that justifies the inconvenience of the equipment. Either shrink it, making as convenient as a phone, or find a killer application.
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Disney has been making imaginary worlds for a long, long time. Maybe they felt they were in friendly territory.
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Folding Ideas did a long but enjoyable video about Decentraland, another Metaverse offering: https://youtu.be/EiZhdpLXZ8Q [youtu.be]
It's a great study on how the Metaverse is failing. Decentraland rarely exceeds a few hundred users, and the most successful outfit in it, a casino, is considered to be doing well when the number of patrons exceeds 100. Of course, most of them aren't even gambling, they just stand in the default spawn location to bump up the stats. One hype merchant reported that they had already made $2.
Axe Iger, save $120 million (Score:1)
Seriously... Cokenose McGee and his stooges are the problem. They bungled the purchase of LucasFilm in such a dramatic and epic fashion that whole generation of MBA students will study it with the intensity that West Point cadets study the assault on Brecourt Manor.
In the meantime, Abigail Disney seems to be making more and more sense:
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/1... [cnbc.com]
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Seriously... Cokenose McGee and his stooges are the problem. They bungled the purchase of LucasFilm in such a dramatic and epic fashion that whole generation of MBA students will study it with the intensity that West Point cadets study the assault on Brecourt Manor.
In the meantime, Abigail Disney seems to be making more and more sense:
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/1... [cnbc.com]
Help me out - Disney recouped the money from the Lucasfilm purchase in around 4 years. From a business perspective, that's pretty amazing - George may wish he asked for more. I realize the filmed haven't lived up to everyone's expectations... but I also see some good people leading the charge at Lucas (Favreau.... et.al.)
How was it bungled?
Well, that was close... (Score:2)
Kinda related (Score:1)
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Re: Mixing it up (Score:1)
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You should look at VRML. It was like a low-polygon version of the metaverse. It never took off for the same reason the 3d file browser in Jurassic Park never took off. (which was real BTW)
I get what the Metaverse is. It's gamification of everything. We'll have avatars, virtual meeting spaces, commerce all in a virtual world, like a MMORPG. Making information digestible means making it simple. When I'm looking at my files, 3D just gets in the way. For that matter, a GUI gets in the way for me, but li
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Just look at the difference 10-20 years back when eCommerce was not even a thing.
Seriously? I first subscribed to Amazon Prime in 2010, 13 years ago. You'd do better lecturing others on the nuances of the metaverse if you had a tiny clue about history.
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I bet my ebay account is older than you are.
I remember the early days of wire transfer online before credit cards got involved.
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It's an inevitable evolution. Deal with it.
Much like 3D TV was an inevitable evolution? Try buying one today. Also, I can't remember the last time I saw a 3D movie for sale at Walmart. It's been years!
What is so "inevitable" about the metaverse?
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Anyone who confidently claims a disputed thing WILL happen without a clear record of his clairvoyant abilities is a fool. Or invested in it and desperate.
Mickey Mouse drops Zuck (Score:2)
It's dead, Jim.
The hype that can't die off fast enough. (Score:2)