By | Jun 27, 2022
From an internship in Walt Disney Co.'s DVD department in 2002, Kareem Daniel has climbed the ladder to a rung involving movie distribution strategy, then to business development for consumer products and interactive media, and more, after he abandoned the safety of an engineering career for his dream—the movie business
[CAPTION]Kareem Daniel, the first Black executive to run a major division in Disney’s 99-year history, at the company’s studio in Burbank, Calif., May 10, 2022. The colossal job of chairman of Disney Media and Entertainment Distribution, which was created to give priority to the company’s streaming services, has made the little-known Daniel one of the entertainment industry’s most powerful executives. (Adam Amengual/The New York Times)[/CAPTION]
Kareem Daniel was on crutches in the spring of 2002. He had broken his right ankle playing basketball. But Daniel had no time to convalesce: A self-imposed clock was ticking on his attempt to change careers — to abandon safe-and-steady electrical engineering, a field that his parents had pushed, for the wild-and-woolly movie business, which was his dream.
So he hobbled to his car, and stared down a sign on the freeway: Los Angeles, 404 miles.
Daniel interviewed all over Hollywood and was rebuffed. Just as he was about to give up, he heard about an internship in the DVD department at the Walt Disney Co. It was supposed to be a phone interview, but Daniel pushed to meet in person. (“I wanted in the room,” he said.) The low-level Disney executive conducting the interview, Bob Chapek, hired him nearly on the spot.
_RSS_“I’m not here today without that,” Daniel said. “It changed everything.”
Over the next 20 years, as Chapek rose to become Disney’s CEO, the unremitting Daniel climbed with him — to a rung involving movie distribution strategy; then to business development for consumer products and interactive media; and ultimately to Imagineering, Disney’s theme park design division, and back to consumer products. In 2020, at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, Chapek made Daniel chair of a new division, Disney Media and Entertainment Distribution, which was created to give priority to the company’s streaming services (Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+) and to guarantee they receive a steady flow of Disney’s best content.
In short, Chapek entrusted Daniel with streaming subscriber growth, an all-important task that has come under increased Wall Street scrutiny in recent months, ever since Netflix started to lose subscribers, shaking Hollywood.
It is a colossal job that has made the little-known Daniel, 48, one of the entertainment industry’s most powerful executives. In some ways, he is Disney’s top content traffic cop, deciding whether $33 billion in annual film and television content gets routed to streaming, traditional TV channels or theaters. Should the next Pixar movie debut exclusively in theaters? Or should it be made instantly available “for free” to Disney+ subscribers? Pixar will be asked for input, but Daniel and his team will make the final call.
“Ultimately, we will make the best decisions that we feel are right for the consumer,” Daniel said.
Chapek gave Daniel global operational and profit-and-loss responsibility for Disney’s streaming services, as well as for traditional channels like ABC and ESPN — turf that previously belonged to Disney’s film and television content divisions. He oversees all advertising sales. Daniel, the first Black executive to run a major Disney division in the company’s 99-year history, also has partial oversight of Disney’s effort to build its version of the metaverse, in which the online, virtual and real worlds coalesce.
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It would be enough to stretch even a seasoned CEO to the brink. But Daniel, a confessed workaholic with a reputation as a tough boss, came across as untroubled in a May interview at Disney’s headquarters in Burbank, California.