BadBurger
Many “Whelps”! Handle It!
This entire affair reminds me of a quote I once read from a sports writer of all people during the MLB lockout:
These execs and CEO's are easily replaceable. They're sponges. They add little value, arguably none. They come and go and their presence has no effect on the quality or output of the creative endeavors they oversee.
Meanwhile, the value of their services are completely dependent upon their writers, actors, and crews. For example, and I'm using them as an example since their returning CEO seemed to want to see his workers go homeless before he even offered them enough money to have health insurance, Disney's television division generates about $3bn a year in profits. None of these ghoulish execs have anything to do with that - it's their writers and actors who carry them to and then over that line.
I also find these CEO's statements so deeply disingenuous. Such as when they claim they offered historic increases for residuals. Well of course they're historic when in previous contracts these true creators made living wages from residuals, but after streaming they now make like 74 cents a payout (Google it). Just offering an increase to something far less than what they paid out prior will be historic comparatively.
And kudos to the poster who tried to childishly make fun of a writer due to their looks, unknowingly helping to prove that writer's point. That was a perfect example of the type of Idiocracy character come to life who actually supports these C-suite villains.
If you went and got the next 1,200 best players in the world, the product would suffer greatly. If you handed MLB teams over to any 30 competent businesspeople, the sport would not suffer. Actually, it might improve. It doesn't take a billionaire to leverage a spot in a legalized monopoly with profound built-in revenues.
The Yankees are not the Yankees if Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra don't win. Without the best players, they aren't in the World Series, and without championships, they're little more than an organization in a big market whose laundry features pinstripes. One would think, then, that a league would recognize that its profits exist because of Shohei Ohtani, Fernando Tatis Jr., Mike Trout, Juan Soto, Mookie Betts, Ronald Acuña Jr., Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and others -- and would see players' concerns about the state of the game not as trivial or excessive or outrageous, but vital.
These execs and CEO's are easily replaceable. They're sponges. They add little value, arguably none. They come and go and their presence has no effect on the quality or output of the creative endeavors they oversee.
Meanwhile, the value of their services are completely dependent upon their writers, actors, and crews. For example, and I'm using them as an example since their returning CEO seemed to want to see his workers go homeless before he even offered them enough money to have health insurance, Disney's television division generates about $3bn a year in profits. None of these ghoulish execs have anything to do with that - it's their writers and actors who carry them to and then over that line.
I also find these CEO's statements so deeply disingenuous. Such as when they claim they offered historic increases for residuals. Well of course they're historic when in previous contracts these true creators made living wages from residuals, but after streaming they now make like 74 cents a payout (Google it). Just offering an increase to something far less than what they paid out prior will be historic comparatively.
And kudos to the poster who tried to childishly make fun of a writer due to their looks, unknowingly helping to prove that writer's point. That was a perfect example of the type of Idiocracy character come to life who actually supports these C-suite villains.