this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2025
577 points (99.8% liked)
Television
1933 readers
211 users here now
Welcome to Television
This community is for discussion of anything related to television or streaming.
Other Communities
- !casualconversation@piefed.social
- !movies@piefed.social
- !animation@piefed.social
- !trailers@lemmy.blahaj.zone
Television Communities
A community for discussion of anything related to Television via broadcast or streaming.
Rules:
- Be respectful and courteous to all members.
- Avoid offensive or discriminatory remarks.
- Avoid spamming or promoting unrelated products/services.
- Avoid personal attacks or engaging in heated arguments.
- Do not engage in any form of illegal activity or promote illegal content.
- Please mask any and all spoilers with spoiler tags.
List of Best Rated TV Series as voted by the Fediverse
founded 5 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
The first time I've ever seen a boycott work, congrats all. For reference remember the cheapest plan is $11 a month, so that was roughly $18.6 million / month lost in revenue they were looking at. Even for a huge company, almost 20mil drop in monthly revenue is going to hit them hard.
Starbucks has closed over 150 stores down after they got boycotted for the past year or two.
Target has been absolutely plummeting also due to boycotts of young adults.
Boycotts work great as long as there are enough people doing it. If a company loses customers on the scale of millions of people or high percentages of consumer base, it will impact them.
Everything I've seen about Starbucks has been them closing unioned stores, I suspect this isn't the win you're thinking it is.
Target is still a good example... And frankly I can't come up with many more than just that, either. 😢
not to mention whatever they were losing in ad revenue per episode.
If you ask me there's still work to be done.
Don't forget that Iger and the executives that made this decision to capitulate are still in their jobs.
Both things can be correct.
Also, from Disney's POV the fixed costs for movies/shows are huge and the incremental cost for subscribers is very low. The lost subscribers come right from profit.
Except that they immediately bumped their subscription prices that week by $2/mo. So they'll recover what they've lost on the backs of the subscribers who didn't take a stand. Nothing more American than that.
Kind of have to define "work" though. When it comes down to it, I don't know if it changes much in any progressive sense. But I guess a win is a win and maybe the line to toe is shifted or solidified for Disney.
it's a win, take the wins when we can because it's going to feel few and far between. The majority of the country stood up and said this is a line we refuse to cross, and we're willing to show you with our wallets. I think that's a massive thing. This is going to be in any exec's head next time a choice like this comes up.