Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Bernie Sanders Calls Out Disney For Making Billions While Workers Go Hungry

Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) tore into the Walt Disney Company on Saturday, citing the disparity between the corporation's record profits and massive CEO pay and it's pattern of keeping workers' wages too low.


"I want to hear the moral defense of a company that makes $9 billion in profits, $400 million for their CEOs and have a 30-year worker going hungry," Sanders told a crowd at a rally in Anaheim, California, the home of Disneyland. "The struggle that you are waging here in Anaheim is not just for you," Sanders said. "It is a struggle for millions of workers all across this country who are sick and tired of working longer hours for lower wages."

Anaheim voters recently gathered enough signatures to have a measure requiring large employers that receive government subsidies to pay at least $15/hr to appear on November's ballot. Should it pass, companies like Disney would have to phase in a minimum park worker wage increase to $15/hr starting January 1, 2019, with an additional $1/hr added every year through January 1, 2022. Once pay hits $18/hr, raises are calculated based on costs of living.

"Disney prides itself on making dreams come true," Disneyland employee Grace Torres asked. "Disney, where is my dream?"

Disney has expressed opposition to the ballot initiative, claiming that such a pay raise would make doing business more expensive and could hamper future development investments. But it's not as if Disney is blind or dismissive of its workers' demands.

During negotiations with worker's unions, Disney has offered to raise employee pay to $15 an hour by 2020, in addition to immediately raising their starting wage of $11/hr to $13.25/hr. Under California law, the state's minimum wage will reach $15 by 2023.

Suzi Brown, vice president of Disneyland Resort Communications, told The Hill that Disney also plans on investing in education and skills development programs for employees, so that they can have the opportunity to "pursue skills and degrees to further their careers."

"While Mr. Sanders continues to criticize Disney to keep himself in the headlines, we continue to support our cast members through investments in wages and education."

But Disney's offer falls short of employee demands. In a survey of 5,000 Disney employees conducted by The Coalition of Resort Labor Unions, a group of unions that work in Disneyland, nearly 75 percent said they don't bring in enough money to meet their basic living expenses. One in ten admitted that they had been homeless in the last two years, despite being employed by the park.


The survey found that average worker pay at Disneyland has been declining for the last 15 years, while Disney's profits have soared to more than $9 billion annually.

More from News

Ellen DeGeneres; Ellen DeGeneres on a lawn mower in the UK
FOX via Getty Images; @ellendegeneres/Instagram

Ellen DeGeneres Just Tried To Mow The Lawn At Her Sprawling UK Estate—And It Went South Fast

Say what you may about Ellen DeGeneres, but we can all agree that she's always tried to find the funny side in a situation, even if it's something that should be as mundane as mowing the lawn.

DeGeneres left the talk show scene in 2022 after allegations ran rampant about her running a toxic workplace, so when President Donald Trump was elected for a second term, it seemed the perfect time for the entertainer and her wife, Portia de Rossi, to look for greener pastures, namely in the U.K.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Pete Buttigieg; Linda McMahon
MSNBC; Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images

Buttigieg Epically Drags Education Secretary For Confusing A.I. With 'A1 Steak Sauce'

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg mocked Education Secretary Linda McMahon during an MSNBC appearance after she recently went viral for confusing AI with A1, the steak sauce brand.

McMahon slipped up during her appearance at the ASU+GSV Summit last month. While discussing the state of modern education, she brought up the role of AI in today's classrooms.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Elon Musk
Fox News

Musk Ripped After Explaining Why He's So Adamant About Colonizing Mars Right Now

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely mocked after explaining to Fox News personality Jesse Watters that he's set on colonizing Mars to ensure that human life continues once Earth is destroyed by the Sun—which is odd, because that eventually is billions of years away.

The Sun, our life-sustaining star, is essentially a massive nuclear reactor, continuously converting hydrogen into helium through fusion and radiating energy outward. But like all stars, it has a finite lifespan. Scientists estimate that the Sun will exhaust its core hydrogen supply in about five billion years, marking the beginning of the end of its stable life.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from @chloyorkcity's TikTok video
@chloyorkcity/TikTok

Disastrous Baltimore Book Festival Sparks Brutal 'Willy Wonka Experience' And 'Fyre Fest' Comparisons

The "Willy Wonka Experience" disaster has struck again—but now among the BookTok community.

BookToker and indie author Grace Willows, who has since set her TikTok profile to private, told the BookTok community that she was organizing a literary ball for indie authors, literary vendors, and readers to meet.

Keep Reading Show less
Anna Wintour
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Fans Spotted A Flaw On Anna Wintour's Met Gala Gown—And Someone's Getting Fired

Even Ana Wintour isn’t above a wardrobe mishap.

During Monday’s 2025 Met Gala, the famously polished Vogue editor-in-chief was spotted with a small but noticeable red stain on her otherwise pristine Louis Vuitton gown.

Keep Reading Show less