“If you guys don’t want to do it, that’s fine, but I want you to get to know Iger before you
decide,” Jobs continued. “I was feeling the same as you, but I’ve really grown to like the guy.” He
explained how easy it had been to make the deal to put ABC shows on the iPod, and added, “It’s
night and day different from Eisner’s Disney. He’s straightforward, and there’s no drama with
him.” Lasseter remembers that he and Catmull just sat there with their mouths slightly open.
Iger went to work. He flew from Los Angeles to Lasseter’s house for dinner, and stayed up well
past midnight talking. He also took Catmull out to dinner, and then he visited Pixar Studios, alone,
with no entourage and without Jobs. “I went out and met all the directors one on one, and they
each pitched me their movie,” he said. Lasseter was proud of how
much his team impressed Iger,
which of course made him warm up to Iger. “I never had more pride in Pixar than that day,” he
said. “All the teams and pitches were amazing, and Bob was blown away.”
Indeed after seeing what was coming up over the next few years—
Cars, Ratatouille, WALL-
E
—Iger told his chief financial officer at Disney, “Oh my God, they’ve got great stuff. We’ve got
to get this deal done. It’s the future of the company.” He admitted that he had no faith in the
movies that Disney animation had in the works.
The deal they proposed was that Disney would purchase Pixar for $7.4 billion in stock. Jobs
would thus become Disney’s largest shareholder, with approximately 7% of the company’s stock
compared to 1.7% owned by Eisner and 1% by Roy Disney. Disney Animation would be put
under Pixar, with Lasseter and Catmull running the combined unit. Pixar would retain its
independent identity, its studio and headquarters would remain in Emeryville, and it would even
keep its own email addresses.
Iger asked Jobs to bring Lasseter and Catmull to a secret meeting of the Disney board in
Century City, Los Angeles, on a Sunday morning. The goal was to
make them feel comfortable
with what would be a radical and expensive deal. As they prepared to take the elevator from the
parking garage, Lasseter said to Jobs, “If I start getting too excited or go on too long, just touch
my leg.” Jobs ended up having to do it once, but otherwise Lasseter made the perfect sales pitch.
“I talked about how we make films, what our philosophies are, the honesty we have with each
other, and how we nurture the creative talent,” he recalled. The board asked a lot of questions, and
Jobs let Lasseter answer most. But Jobs did talk about how exciting it was to connect art with
technology. “That’s what our culture is all about, just like at Apple,” he said.
Before the Disney board got a chance to approve the merger, however, Michael
Eisner arose
from the departed to try to derail it. He called Iger and said it was far too expensive. “You can fix
animation yourself,” Eisner told him. “How?” asked Iger. “I know you can,” said Eisner. Iger got
a bit annoyed. “Michael, how come you say I can fix it, when you couldn’t fix it yourself?” he
asked.
Eisner said he wanted to come to a board meeting, even though he was no longer a member or
an officer, and speak against the acquisition. Iger resisted, but Eisner called Warren Buffett, a big
shareholder, and George Mitchell, who was the lead director. The former senator convinced Iger
to let Eisner have his say. “I told the board that they didn’t need to buy Pixar because they already
owned 85% of the movies Pixar had already made,” Eisner recounted. He
was referring to the fact
that for the movies already made, Disney was getting that percentage of the gross, plus it had the
rights to make all the sequels and exploit the characters. “I made a presentation that said, here’s
the 15% of Pixar that Disney does not already own. So that’s what you’re getting. The rest is a bet
on future Pixar films.” Eisner admitted that Pixar had been enjoying a good run, but he said it
could not continue. “I showed the history of producers and directors who had X number of hits in
a row and then failed. It happened to Spielberg, Walt Disney, all of them.” To make the deal worth
it, he calculated, each new Pixar movie would have to gross $1.3 billion. “It drove Steve crazy that
I knew that,” Eisner later said.
After
he left the room, Iger refuted his argument point by point. “Let me tell you what was
wrong with that presentation,” he began. When the board had finished hearing them both, it
approved the deal Iger proposed.
Iger flew up to Emeryville to meet Jobs and jointly announce the deal to the Pixar workers. But
before they did, Jobs sat down alone with Lasseter and Catmull. “If either of you have doubts,” he
said, “I will just tell them no thanks and blow off this deal.” He wasn’t totally sincere. It would
have been almost impossible to do so at that point. But it was a welcome gesture. “I’m good,” said
Lasseter. “Let’s do it.” Catmull agreed. They all hugged, and Jobs wept.
Everyone then gathered in the atrium. “Disney is buying Pixar,” Jobs announced. There were a
few tears, but as he explained the deal, the staffers began to realize that in some ways it was a
reverse acquisition. Catmull would be the head of Disney animation, Lasseter its chief creative
officer. By the end they were cheering. Iger had been standing on the side,
and Jobs invited him to
center stage. As he talked about the special culture of Pixar and how badly Disney needed to
nurture it and learn from it, the crowd broke into applause.
“My goal has always been not only to make great products, but to build great companies,” Jobs
later said. “Walt Disney did that. And the way we did the merger, we kept Pixar as a great
company and helped Disney remain one as well.”