In the corporate world, the first few days of a new CEO’s tenure are usually spent shaking hands and posing for Fortune magazine. But for Josh D’Amaro, the newly minted CEO of The Walt Disney Company, and Dana Walden, the powerhouse President and CCO of Disney Entertainment, the honeymoon lasted exactly forty-eight hours.

By Thursday, March 19, 2026, the duo was forced into a high-stakes “war room” in Burbank to make a decision that would incinerate $50 million in a single afternoon. The casualty? Season 22 of The Bachelorette.
The shocking cancellation of an entire, fully-produced season—starring TikTok’s “Momtok” lightning rod Taylor Frankie Paul—wasn't just a programming shift. It was a brutal, public declaration that the “anything for ratings” era at Disney is officially over.
The Taylor Frankie Paul Liability
The decision to cast Taylor Frankie Paul was originally a “Hail Mary” by the previous administration to capture the elusive Gen Z audience. Paul, the face of the “soft swinging” scandal that rocked the Mormon community and the star of Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, brought with her a massive digital following and a penchant for viral chaos.

However, the gamble turned toxic when a “nuclear” video surfaced via TMZ just days before the premiere. The footage—a 2023 domestic altercation involving Paul and her ex-partner—depicted a level of violence that was impossible to “edit around.” Most critically for Disney, the video captured the incident occurring in front of Paul’s young daughter.
For D’Amaro, who spent years protecting the “sanctity” of Disney Parks, the optics were a non-starter. You cannot sell “The Most Magical Place on Earth” while your flagship reality star is the face of a child-endangerment scandal.
The $50 Million Sunk Cost
When D’Amaro and Walden pulled the plug, they weren't just canceling a show; they were burning a finished product. Industry insiders estimate the “burn” at approximately $50 million, broken down into a financial nightmare:

- Production Costs ($25M–$30M): The entire season was filmed in high-end locations across Utah and Europe. Crew salaries, travel, and post-production are now total losses.
- Marketing & Ad Spend ($10M): ABC had already launched a massive promotional blitz, including Times Square billboards and Hulu digital takeovers.
- Ad Revenue & “Make-Goods” ($15M+): The Bachelorette is a cornerstone of summer ad revenue. Disney now owes massive “make-goods” (free ad space on other shows) to sponsors who had bought premium slots for the premiere.
Despite the staggering price tag, D’Amaro and Walden remained unified. To them, the $50 million was a “down payment” on the company’s reputation.
D’Amaro’s “Brand-First” Doctrine
This move serves as the definitive manifesto for the D’Amaro and Walden era. For years, critics argued Disney had lost its way, chasing viral influencers and “messy” reality tropes at the expense of its core values. By killing the Paul season, the new leadership has established a “Zero Tolerance” policy for brand-tarnishing content.

“Josh and Dana are signaling a retreat from the ‘Wild West' of influencer-led reality TV,” says a veteran TV analyst. “They are returning to a curated, brand-conscious strategy where the ‘Disney Shield' comes before the Nielsen rating.”
The Fallout for “Momtok” and The Bachelor
The cancellation has sent a chill through the reality TV industry. Taylor Frankie Paul’s Hulu series is reportedly on “indefinite hiatus,” and the “Momtok” bubble appears to have burst. For the Bachelor franchise, the future is now under a microscope. Insiders suggest the show will pivot back to its “genuine” roots—exemplified by the success of The Golden Bachelor—rather than chasing the next viral TikTok scandal.
Conclusion: The New Standard
Josh D’Amaro and Dana Walden could have started their roles with a safe, corporate reshuffle. Instead, they started with a $50 million execution. By choosing the “hard right over the easy wrong,” they have established a new standard for Disney content. The rose wasn't just declined; it was incinerated to protect the Magic Kingdom.



