Connect with us

MAM

Comcast Disney drama continues, new bids for the Mouse likely

Published

on

MUMBAI: Two days after Comcast announced its bid for Disney, there seems to be no definite turn of events on the matter. But one thing for sure that will come out of the merger is that it would fundamentally redraw the lines in a constant battle between cable and satellite systems and ESPN over rates for sports programming.

Comcast is ESPN’s biggest customer and ESPN is the most costly and the most valuable basic cable network which puts them on opposite ends of tough negotiations over the price to carry the popular sports channel. Every year, Disney has raised the asking price for its ESPN network by as much as 20 per cent, and cable companies, such as Comcast and Cox Communications Inc. have balked.

Now, Comcast’s unsolicited bid for Disney would, for the first time, put ESPN in the hands of a company that has the ability to distribute it – and raise prices for its rivals like Disney does – potentially stirring up the contentious issue some more. Of course as a corporate parent of Disney, Comcast would want to boost profits from both ESPN and its own cable properties, a balance that is tricky, but not impossible.

Advertisement

Whatever said and done, in the end Comcast would have to comply with the FCC’s program access rules, which would guarantee access to ESPN.

While all these issues are being thrown up, Walt Disney CEO Michael Eisner at a presentation to analysts yesterday, joked about how they planned to buy Comcast. According to one media report, after about eight hours of presentation, Eisner was the first Disney executive to make any direct mention of the bid by Comcast, after someone in the audience asked him about Disney’s acquisition strategy. “Acquisitions? Oh – we’re buying Comcast!” he joked.

Eisner even went to the extent of jesting at Pixar CEO and co-founder of Apple Computer Inc. whose Macintosh computers are a leading alternative to PCs running Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system Steve Jobs. Eisner was quoted in a media report saying, “He created the computer, or at least Windows, or whatever he created, and did a good job.” There were peals of laughter from analysts attending the company conference in Orlando, Florida where he was addressing the collapse of talks between Disney and Pixar on extending their partnership, which has generated five smash hits including last year’s Finding Nemo. Since those talks failed late last month, Eisner and Jobs have traded barbs, each blaming the other.

Advertisement

The presentation to analysts were meant in part to counter that charge by showing the company’s turnaround strategy will pay off with strong growth through at least 2007. Eisner also said that the company would consider a higher dividend as a use for the company’s cash. He was quoted in a media report as saying, “We pay a pretty good dividend, I mean as far as size of the money. I’m sure we’ll be talking about that as well.”

In the midst of all this, while News Corp’s Rupert Murdoch said that he was not interested in making a bid for Disney, it was reported in The Post that Time Warner is weighing a possible bid for the company to counter Comcast’s surprise hostile takeover offer for Disney. Time Warner, the world’s biggest media company, was scheduled to hold a conference call with investment bankers to discuss the possibility of making a run at Disney as was reported in the paper.

Meanwhile, Pixar Animation Studios’ Steve Jobs was also understood to be in active discussions with parties, including cable operators, about putting together a team to emerge as a potential bidder for the Mouse House. One media report said that the potential suitors for Disney, including Time Warner, Viacom and Pixar were being forced to jockey for position in what may turn into a bidding war for Disney following the $66 billion unsolicited takeover bid that Comcast launched.

Advertisement

Now it is only a matter of wait and watch to find out which cat finally manages to nip the much-sought-after Mouse.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

MAM

Women lead just 13 per cent of key creative roles in Indian cinema: O Womaniya! 2025 study 

Telugu content shows sharpest rise in female representation

Published

on

prime-video

MUMBAI: Prime Video has released the latest edition of O Womaniya!, its annual study tracking female representation in Indian entertainment, showing uneven progress across content, creative roles, marketing and corporate leadership.

The 2025 report analysed 122 films and series released in 2024 across streaming and theatrical platforms in nine Indian languages. Researched by Ormax Media and produced by Film Companion Studios, the study remains one of the most comprehensive audits of gender representation in the industry.

According to the findings, only 32 per cent of titles passed the O Womaniya! content test, which measures whether women have agency and drive their own stories. Streaming films showed a marked improvement, with 47 per cent clearing the test, up 16 percentage points from the previous year, while theatrical releases continued to lag.

Advertisement

Telugu-language titles, historically among the weakest performers in female representation, recorded the sharpest improvement, rising 21 percentage points to 31 per cent. The report also found that while women-commissioned projects performed better, gains among male-commissioned titles underlined the importance of male allies in closing the equity gap.

Behind the camera, progress stalled. Women held just 13 per cent of head-of-department roles across key creative functions, down from 15 per cent last year. Representation fell most sharply in editing and cinematography, while only 8 per cent of titles featured a female director.

Marketing remained skewed. Women accounted for just 29 per cent of trailer dialogue time, though streaming titles continued to allocate higher visibility than theatrical releases.

Advertisement

At the corporate level, female representation in director and CXO roles across leading media and entertainment firms rose to 18 per cent, up from 12 per cent last year: a modest but notable gain.

Prime Video India director and head of production and post, international originals Stuti Ramachandra, said balanced representation was essential for storytelling that resonates at scale. Ormax Media founder and CEO Shailesh Kapoor said the report aimed to move the industry from intent to measurable impact.

Five years since its launch, O Womaniya! continues to frame the debate on gender equity in Indian entertainment, highlighting progress in pockets while underscoring how far the industry still has to go.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Advertisement News18
Advertisement All three Media
Advertisement Whtasapp
Advertisement Year Enders

Copyright © 2026 Indian Television Dot Com PVT LTD