It's still Disney, so if they actually get around into executing this, you never know what kind of terms they come up with. Still, given the situation, maybe they'll be reasonable for once? I mean, to quote former Disney executive Michael Eisner: "What if the engine of an airplane falls out in full flight? What are the options? Anything is possible today..."
I guess we've got a multi engine stall in full flight right now...
It's probably a personal thing, but I think a little bit of cynicism is a good way to deal with an otherwise pretty dire situation.
For something as complex as the movie industry, I think "crash and burn" has never been a realistic option, all "end-case-scenarios" would probably feature a long-winded decline into oblivion. But, the movie industry has gone south before. It's possibly as resilient as cockroaches, you can greatly diminish the population, but they'll never go entirely extinct, unless the entire planet gets utterly and completely atomized in an instant. It will even survive this whole pandemic in one form or another...
I guess we've got a multi engine stall in full flight right now...
Of course I was being facetious about the whole earthquake, volcano thing. But you have to admit it would be better for the movie industry to die an instant fiery incineration than to be slowly starved to death.
For something as complex as the movie industry, I think "crash and burn" has never been a realistic option, all "end-case-scenarios" would probably feature a long-winded decline into oblivion. But, the movie industry has gone south before. It's possibly as resilient as cockroaches, you can greatly diminish the population, but they'll never go entirely extinct, unless the entire planet gets utterly and completely atomized in an instant. It will even survive this whole pandemic in one form or another...
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