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Disney news: Making New Miley's: Disney's Teen-Star Factory

dwmckim

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Since the below article doesn't mention the Muppets, i'm placing this in General Discussion though i thought Muppet fans might find this interesting as a look as per where the new Disney's Head head is at. We may moan when the Muppets do something like "Studio DC" though such a project (and its upcoming dvd release) may indeed by very smart moves. Also interesting to note (and what drew me to the article to begin with) is the section where it details how important Disney's cable channels are in terms of the company's current revenue/success:

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from time.com

Making New Mileys: Disney's Teen-Star Factory
By BELINDA LUSCOMBE Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2009

Bridgit Mendler is a willowy, blond teen with a sweet singing voice and decent comic timing. She's also the show-biz equivalent of the next iPhone â€" a young Disney star-in-waiting. Mendler, 16, is getting the full Disney Channel rollout. Introduced with recurring guest spots on two of its hit shows, Jonas and Wizards of Waverly Place, she will star in her own series, Good Luck Charlie, in 2010. "I've been told to brace myself," says Mendler. "If we have the success I hope we have with the show, everything will change."

Mendler is following a path to fame the channel has mapped over the past three years as it has launched serial stars into orbit: the supernova Miley Cyrus in 2006, Selena Gomez in 2007, the Jonas Brothers in 2008 and Demi Lovato this year.

Each of these youngsters was given a TV show â€" the so-called zitcom â€" followed usually by a recording contract with Disney-owned Hollywood Records, songs in heavy rotation on Radio Disney and on Disney-movie sound tracks, a concert tour with Disney-owned Buena Vista Concerts and tie-in merchandise throughout the Disney stores. Miley & Co. are like modern Mouseketeers, but instead of M-I-C-K-E-Y, they spell C-A-S-H.

The Disney Teen Machine has become a finely tuned profit pump in an industry rife with unpredictability. The result is that Disney's cable networks represent the one slightly solid piece of earth among the entertainment giant's sinking properties. ABC is struggling, sales are way down at Disney's theme parks and stores, most of its non-Pixar movies have been wan performers, and revenue from DVDs is shriveling. The cable networks, which in addition to the Disney Channel include ESPN, ABC Family, Soapnet and Disney XD, brought in 26% of the company's $26.3 billion in revenue and 58% of its $4.8 billion in operating income during the nine months ending June 27. In the past three years, they have represented 80% of Disney's revenue growth.

ESPN does rule sports with ever higher-priced program rights, but as an incubator, Disney Channel is more important, a fact amply displayed by its
High School Musical franchise. The channel made the original TV movie for about $5 million. It took off, leading to a sequel, a sound-track album, a motion picture, books and video games. "So far, the franchise has generated $150 million to $200 million in operating income," estimates Barclays Capital analyst Anthony DiClemente. If the company leverages all aspects of the brand, he says, the teen franchises are a formidable force.

Disney's much admired ability to maximize profit from every pop-culture nugget it creates â€" this is a company that made billions of dollars from movies based on Pirates of the Caribbean, a cheesy 10-minute boat ride â€" works only if it continues to create appealing characters and stories that it can cross-promote. When Gomez released her new album, Kiss & Tell, on Sept. 29, she celebrated with an appearance on ABC's Dancing with the Stars. She has a song that plays during the end credits of the first Tinkerbell DVD. While on hiatus from her show, Wizards of Waverly Place, she made a TV movie with Lovato, Princess Protection Program, that got decent ratings. Mike Tirico just can't pull off that stuff.

That's why the Disney Channel's ability to mint teen stars is so central to the company's future and why Rich Ross, former head of the Disney Channel, was recently tapped to replace longtime studio chief Dick Cook. In many ways, Ross ran his outfit like an old-school movie studio. The channel has always found young stars. Shia LaBeouf got his first break there, as did Hilary Duff and â€" way back in 1993 â€" Britney Spears. But only in the past few years has Disney mastered how to hang on to them, to keep them from getting away like LaBeouf, tiring of Disney like Duff or being churned into tabloid chum like Spears. And only since
High School Musical and Hannah Montana has it learned how to supersize them.
 

D'Snowth

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Miley can't be stopped... nothing can kill her... she's the walking dead...
 

dwmckim

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Miley can stop Miley. As in self-destruct. I won't deny that she has talent but she's fallen into the tabloid trap of overindulgence (and i'm sure there's a number of stuff not being reported). We've seen it before; we'll see it again. There are so many "True Hollywood Stories" about former teen stars that they've become cliche and when you add the kind of intense machine Disney puts them through that's a recipe for disaster.

Am iffy on Selena Gomez and Jonas Brothers as per how much their success matches their actual talent (i will say that - eek - watching JoBros trying to act makes their show a true comedy in ways i'm sure no one quite intended; as per their singing all three need some serious vocal training to get rid of that whiny adolescent sound...the oldest brother sounds no different than the younger two which is sad considering their actual ages...and i largely suspect part of that "sound" is a corporate-dictated thing to make them sound younger and not as "mature" which will only wreck their voices over time) but i am happy to see Demi Lovato find the success she has as i think she's an extraordinary talent. I really hope she has a good head on her shoulders and doesn't fall into the same traps that so many of her predicessors have.
 

D'Snowth

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Miley can stop Miley. As in self-destruct. I won't deny that she has talent but she's fallen into the tabloid trap of overindulgence (and i'm sure there's a number of stuff not being reported).
I'm going to have to disagree with you on that - I've seen her acting before, her performance is rather wooden and very forced (as in she KNOWS the camera's there, and hams it up a bit for it), meanwhile I'm not one for country music, let alone most of modern music.

I DO agree on the tabloid trap of overindulgence.
 

APRena

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Disney's been doing it forever-- since the Duff/LaBeouf era-- but now it's just getting out of hand and becoming more obvious. Miley, Demi, Selena; the Trinity of Disney cash-cows. (add the JoBros and you have the most advanced form of mind control known to humankind.) :smirk:

They're trying to stock up on stars for when one of them quits.
 

Gelfling Girl

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If the show JONAS had a different title, starred completely unknown (and not "totally hawt" by typical teen/tween girl standards) people, it probably wouldn't be so popular. :stick_out_tongue:
 

dwmckim

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I'm going to have to disagree with you on that - I've seen her acting before, her performance is rather wooden and very forced (as in she KNOWS the camera's there, and hams it up a bit for it), meanwhile I'm not one for country music, let alone most of modern music.

I DO agree on the tabloid trap of overindulgence.
Yeah, i probably should have been a little more specific; i was only thinking of her in terms as a recording artist - her acting is ... well not JoBro levels of horrible, but very mediocre even by teen sitcom standards.

I never paid much attention to her musically but Hilary Duff was an amazing talent as per acting. I miss seeing that caliber in current Disney shows (Life with Derek is the only thing that comes close and that was an aquired show from somewhere else if i'm not mistaken)

I notice the Sprouse brothers weren't mentioned in that article but then i don't think they've even attempted to sing. They've recently hit puberty and it ain't pretty - unless they get some major acting training, i think they're pretty much over once their show is. Brenda Song will have quite a bit of life left as i think she does have a lot of potential but doesn't get a chance to show it with the shallow one-note character she plays. Then of course you have Ashley Tisdale who's already moved beyond Suite Life and is a genuine multi-talented star that should keep going on to bigger and better things.
 

Gelfling Girl

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Well, I have noticed Disney Channel rerunning some episode of Lizzie McGuire recently...
 

APRena

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I never paid much attention to her musically but Hilary Duff was an amazing talent as per acting. I miss seeing that caliber in current Disney shows (Life with Derek is the only thing that comes close and that was an aquired show from somewhere else if i'm not mistaken)

I notice the Sprouse brothers weren't mentioned in that article but then i don't think they've even attempted to sing. They've recently hit puberty and it ain't pretty - unless they get some major acting training, i think they're pretty much over once their show is. Brenda Song will have quite a bit of life left as i think she does have a lot of potential but doesn't get a chance to show it with the shallow one-note character she plays. Then of course you have Ashley Tisdale who's already moved beyond Suite Life and is a genuine multi-talented star that should keep going on to bigger and better things.

Disney got Life With Derek from Canada, I think. That was a good show. It's sad what happened to Dylan & Cole, (I had a crush on Cody when the first show started... :flirt:) Now they're just not cute, so you're forced to pay attention to the fact the they can't act that well. They probably never could, but *I* didn't notice.
 
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