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A scene from Pixar’s 2009 film Up. Photograph: Cinematic Collection/Alamy
A scene from Pixar’s 2009 film Up. Photograph: Cinematic Collection/Alamy

Disney’s Pixar to cut 14% of workforce as it scales back original streaming content

Approximately 175 people to be affected by layoffs as CEO Bob Iger returns studio’s focus exclusively to feature films

Pixar Animation Studios, which produced such classic films as Toy Story and Up, began laying off about 14% of its workforce on Tuesday as it scales back development of original streaming series, according to a source familiar with the development.

Approximately 175 people will be affected by job cuts at the Walt Disney Company unit.

The animation studio had hired additional staff to create original series as the former Disney CEO Bob Chapek pushed each of the company’s creative units to produce exclusive content for Disney+.

Chapek’s successor, Bob Iger, has scaled back spending on original streaming content to lift Disney+ to profitability. The company’s entertainment division, which includes the Disney+ and Hulu streaming services, reported an operating profit in the most recent quarter.

Pixar will return its focus exclusively to feature films, which will screen in theaters before becoming available in homes via Disney+. A single original series, Win or Lose, about a co-ed softball team, will appear this year on Disney+.

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Reuters reported the first wave of layoffs last year, and earlier this year reported that another wave of cuts were coming.

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