How Disney Fans Feel About Company's 'Don't Say Gay' Bill Response

Publish date: 2024-08-04

Walt Disney Co.’s response to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill — widely considered by observers to have been botched — has been the talk of the trades in recent weeks. But stories of employee walkouts and discontent may not necessarily paint an accurate picture of how U.S. consumers and Disney fans feel about how the company has handled the situation. 

New Morning Consult survey data indicates the outcry is probably more internal than external, as Disney fans not only generally support the steps taken by the company but also oppose the more drastic proposed measures, such as pulling business from Florida and closing down parks in the state. Still, more Disney fans think it’s important for younger audiences to have access to LGBTQ+ entertainment content than those who do not.

More on the numbers

The impact

Frustration with Disney appears to be largely internal — perhaps amplified by media coverage — as U.S. consumers are, for the most part, satisfied with the actions taken by the company in the wake of Florida’s bill. Facing pressure from employees and allies, Disney brands such as Hulu, Disney+ and ESPN have issued statements condemning anti-LGBTQ+ legislation

In fact, awareness of Disney’s actions is relatively low, even among self-identified fans. Roughly 3 in 5 (62 percent) said they’d heard nothing about Disney’s reported censorship of Pixar movies, while 57 percent said the same of Chapek’s eventual denouncement of the bill.

But what happens when other centers of the entertainment industry are caught in similar controversy? Georgia, a Hollywood production hub in recent years, has introduced its own version of the anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, and Texas is currently attempting to classify gender-affirming care for children as child abuse. As audiences become more aware of these pieces of legislation, consumer sentiment could shift, and Hollywood studios may need to prepare to do a lot more than make some donations.  

Disney did not respond to request for comment for this story. 

Survey conducted March 14-17, 2022, among a representative sample of 2,210 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

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