Bob Iger’s honeymoon return to the CEO helm at Disney became a nightmare for many of its previously overjoyed employees earlier this week when this little missive wound up in inboxes (as reported by Alex Sherman and Sarah Whitten of CNBC.com):
Bob Iger told hybrid employees on Monday they must return to corporate offices four days a week starting March 1, according to an email obtained by CNBC.
In the email, Iger stressed the importance of in-person collaboration.
“As I’ve been meeting with teams throughout the company over the past few months, I’ve been reminded of the tremendous value in being together with the people you work with,” Iger wrote. “As you’ve heard me say many times, creativity is the heart and soul of who we are and what we do at Disney. And in a creative business like ours, nothing can replace the ability to connect, observe, and create with peers that comes from being physically together, nor the opportunity to grow professionally by learning from leaders and mentors.
The firing of GMA3 anchors T.J. Holmes and Amy Robach yesterday, a few weeks after the public reveal of their in-office romance, which followed a lengthy internal investigation, was unfortunately expected by many. Disney has strict policies regarding colleagues having personal relationships, and in the wake of the #MeToo movement support for these types of mandates has accelerated. Allegations that Holmes had had past relationships with other work colleagues have surfaced, and whether or not they were consensual remains in the realm of debate and rumor. I’m not about to intelligently discuss, and certainly won’t defend, any incident of harassment that he may have inflicted. This is strictly about two people, both clearly in relationships they were less than satisfied with, who worked together, were part of a program designed to instill and convey chemistry to attract a daytime audiene and, yes, they fell in love.
According to the lawsuit, Williams said she applied in August 2021 for a disability exemption from the network’s vaccine mandate because she was undergoing in vitro fertilization. (The CDC has stated “there is currently no evidence that any vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines, cause fertility problems in women or men.”)Williams said she was unable to obtain a doctor’s letter to support her concerns because medical providers were being “threatened” for doing so in California, leading her to apply for a religious exemption weeks later.
“(Williams) informed Defendants in writing that she was a Christian and that her sincerely held and heartfelt religious beliefs prohibited her from being vaccinated,” the suit reads.
When asked by management for additional information, Williams said she hadn’t received any vaccinations since she had “a bad reaction to one” at age 12 and that her daughter, who was 2 at the time, hadn’t received any vaccinations either.
The lawsuit claims that ESPN and Disney made no efforts to accommodate Williams, who offered to work remote, test regularly and wear a mask, although NFL teams, college football teams and certain venues didn’t exclude the unvaccinated.
In Faber’s case, her allegations cut deeper into some uncomfortable truths that, based upon my experience, I don’t summarily dismiss as quickly as some of the Disney lawyers are attempting to:
In the lawsuit, Faber said an ESPN HR representative told her “maybe God has led you to a new career, when God closes a door, he opens another.”
The 83-page complaint alleges that Disney’s vaccine mandate was not the company’s own doing, but a “state action” influenced by its “symbiotic relationship with the Defense Department.”
“It is well-known that the Defense Department has exercised direct editorial control over Disney’s content,” the suit reads. “That control does not stop at content but extends to direct, indirect and covert encouragement as it pertains to policies and practices, such as vaccination requirements.”
Now, yet again, for the benefit of anyone reading this who wants to pass judgment on me, I’ll reiterate I have five vaccines and, thankfully, I’ve yet to have COVID. My best friend and her best friend choose to be unvaccinated for many reasons similar to those expressed by Williams. And we’re all fine, thank you very much. And I’ve yet to see a credible, clean study from any viable authority that has produced a statistically significant result that clearly draws a distinction between infection rates between vaccinated and unvaccinated. Yes, people without vaccines do get sicker, and that’s a risk that they choose to take. But in practically every recorded case, there were other mitigating factors of pre-existing conditions that were noted. It is NOT just about the vaccine, and certainly not just about the mask. Once again, note that Williams was more than willing to accommodate her co-workers and consent to masking and testing. Disney’s POLICY was what resulted in her dismissal. You can snark all you want that she’s now an employee for FOX Sports. But I know plenty of people who work there, and have worked with her, and no one’s gotten sick yet on her watch. And yes, she’s earning a living to support her newborn. As she has a right, and the talent to do.
I also know people who worked with Faber over the years. She’s an excellent producer and someone who knows how to research a story. So if she’s making allegations and willing to go on record with them, this is not merely the ramblings of someone who believes in Jewish space lasers.
So if Iger feels so strongly about putting people back together in an office environment, he and his HR people ultimately have to confront the reality that convictions like those so deeply felt by the likes of Williams and Faber are part of the reality of how families, work or otherwise, have to compromise in order to co-exist. And relationships like those that developed between Holmes and Robach are as well.
Incidentally, in case you think my view on consensual relationships is an outlier, take a look at this ratings nugget that dropped soon after the couple’s romance was announced, per Dan Clarendon of TVInsider:
On Thursday, December 1 — one day after the Daily Mail reported that Holmes and Robach “have been locked in a passionate romance” — 1.81 million viewers watched GMA3: What You Need to Know, according to Nielsen data cited by Variety on Friday, December 9. That’s an 11 percent increase from the average of 1.63 million viewers who tuned into GMA3’s prior three broadcasts.
So if their own viewers–the ultimate source of revenue for the Disney organization–don’t seem to mind, why in G-d’s name should a policy exist that punishes it?
Especially if you’re gonna mandate that people like that indeed have to work together in the same space?
I don’t know, Bob. You tell me. Better yet, tell their lawyers.
And I’ll say this much. I will gladly work anywhere in the world for you, I’ve fully vaxxed, and I promise if I indeed fall for a co-worker, I’ll let the appropriate parties know about it as soon as I’m aware of it.
I’m on your side, sir. Shouldn’t you be instructing your minions to be understanding of the trade-offs for that policy?
Until next time…