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Disney CEO Bob Iger resigns from his Apple board seat, Ars Technica

Disney CEO Bob Iger resigns from his Apple board seat, Ars Technica


      Apple TV –

             

The news came in an SEC filing on Friday.

      

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Disney CEO and former Apple board member Bob Iger.

Enlarge/Disney CEO and former Apple board member Bob Iger.

Disney CEO Bob Iger has sat on Apple’s board since 2011 , but that tenure came to an end this month, according to aSEC filingApple made on Friday. The filing says that Iger resigned from Apple’s board on September 10, the day that Apple announcedthe pricing and launch date for Apple TV .

Iger released the following statement:

It has been an extraordinary privilege to have served on the Apple board for eight years, and I have the utmost respect for Tim Cook, his team at Apple and for my fellow board members. Apple is one of the world’s most admired companies, known for the quality and integrity of its products and its people and I am forever grateful to have served as a member of the company’s board.

Iger’s position on the board became a topic of discussion and speculation after Apple and Disney both announced streaming TV services that will launch close to the same time, at similar price points, though neither Iger nor Apple have shared any clarification as to the reason for the resignation.

At the same time, it might be a reach to frame Disney and Apple TV as direct competitors at present. For one thing, many consumers subscribe to multiple streaming services, and that practice is likely to become even more the norm in the future entertainment landscape.

For another, Apple TV is at present amodestly sized collectionofnewly producedseries, whereas Disney combines the massive backlogs of many of the world’s biggest entertainment companies with a far more robust lineup of new series and films. One is boutique; the other is not. And there have been many past instances of an executive, board member, and other figure having a hand in multiple cable TV channels at once, owned by different companies. It’s unclear how this differs.

The move could provide a hint as to Apple’s future ambitions, however. Right now, Apple TV ‘s strategy is relatively small in scope — at least compared to current and future offerings from Disney, Netflix, and WarnerMedia. But this move may suggest that Apple sees its service as something that will become more than a focused niche in the future.                   

              

                  

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