Search results
Results from the Tech24 Deals Content Network
In 2003, Roy E. Disney (Walt’s nephew) and fellow dissident director Stanley Gold were kicked off the board and the duo led a “Save Disney” shareholder revolt against Eisner.
Bob Iger. Robert Alan Iger ( / ˈaɪɡər /; born February 10, 1951) [3] is an American media executive who is Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of The Walt Disney Company. [4] He previously was the President of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) between 1994 and 1995 and President and Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Capital Cities/ABC, from ...
Disney resigned as an executive from Walt Disney Productions in 1977 over disagreements with corporate decisions. He later said, "I just felt creatively the company was not going anywhere interesting. It was very stifling." [6] Disney retained a seat on the board of directors until 1984, when he resigned in the midst of a corporate takeover battle.
Susan Arnold began her career as a brand assistant for the Dawn/Ivory Snow Group at Proctor Gamble in 1980. In 1999, she assumed global responsibility for Procter & Gamble's beauty business, thereby becoming the first woman to reach a president-level position in the company. [ 3][ 4] She retired from Procter & Gamble on September 1, 2009. [ 5]
The same day activist investor Nelson Peltz announced he was launching a proxy campaign to get seats on Disney’s board of directors, the company adopted amended bylaws covering nominations of ...
Shareholders’ support for Disney’s slate of directors—and their rejection of Peltz and former Marvel chairman Ike Perlmutter’s effort to secure board seats for Peltz and former Disney CFO ...
The Walt Disney World College Program is a U.S. national internship program operated by The Walt Disney Company, located at the Walt Disney World Resort. The Walt Disney World College Program recruits students (18 years and older) and all majors for a semester-long paid internship program working at the Walt Disney World Resort.
Disney’s board of directors “urges shareholders to protect their investment and the future of the company” by voting for only the Disney-picked 12 nominees, the company said.