When Josh D’Amaro officially stepped into the role of Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company in late March 2026, the industry expected a victory lap. The “Golden Boy” of the Parks division—famous for his approachable “Josh” name tag and his uncanny ability to make a $180 theme park ticket feel like a bargain—was finally at the helm.

However, as a scathing new analysis from Fortune outlines, D’Amaro didn’t get a honeymoon period. Instead, he inherited a “Perfect Storm” of logistical, financial, and cultural crises that would have buckled even the most seasoned executive. From the collapse of a billion-dollar tech partnership to a national travel meltdown and “popcorn bucket” violence in employee housing, D’Amaro’s first seven days were less “magical” and more “mercurial.”
1. The $1 Billion OpenAI Divorce
The most significant financial blow to the D’Amaro administration came before he could even finish moving his favorite Mickey Mouse sketches into the executive office. For months, Disney had been betting big on a massive, $1 billion partnership with OpenAI. The deal was supposed to integrate the revolutionary Sora video platform into Disney+, enabling “generative storytelling” that would let users create their own shorts featuring iconic characters.

On March 24, 2026, OpenAI abruptly pulled the plug on Sora, citing massive compute costs. Just like that, Disney’s $1 billion tech strategy was dead in the water. While Wall Street panicked, sending Disney’s stock into a volatile swing, the fan community saw an opportunity. With that $1 billion now sitting as unallocated capital, fans have flooded social media with a “Maintenance Mandate.” They aren't mourning the loss of AI; they’re demanding D’Amaro spend that “found money” on the physical parks—specifically, fixing the infamous “Disco Yeti” at Animal Kingdom and accelerating the construction of the already-announced Villains Land.
2. The $50 Million Bachelorette Scandal
If the OpenAI fallout was a financial blow, the Taylor Frankie Paul disaster was a cultural catastrophe. Just three days before the premiere of Season 22 of The Bachelorette, a “nuclear” video surfaced on TMZ. The footage, dating back to a 2023 domestic altercation, allegedly showed Paul in a violent dispute, throwing objects in a domestic setting.

In his first major move as CEO, D’Amaro—alongside Disney Entertainment leadership—made the brutal decision to cancel the entire season. This wasn't just a scheduling tweak; it was a $50 million sunk-cost disaster. Between production expenses, marketing spends, and the “make-goods” owed to major advertisers, Disney essentially lit a bonfire with its Sunday night revenue. While D’Amaro was praised for “Brand First” leadership, the move left ABC scrambling to find 12 weeks of replacement programming on three days' notice.
3. The Spring Break “ICE Surge” and TSA Crisis
D’Amaro’s first week also coincided with a logistical nightmare that turned the “Most Magical Place on Earth” into a “Most Stressful Place to Get To.” Due to a partial government shutdown and a severe staffing crisis at TSA, the Department of Homeland Security took the unprecedented step of deploying ICE agents to staff security checkpoints at major U.S. airports.

For families traveling to Orlando (MCO), the “ICE Surge” at hubs like Atlanta and Chicago meant security lines that spilled out into the streets. Thousands of guests arrived at Disney World already exhausted, having spent four hours in airport security. Once in the parks, the stress didn't end. With record-breaking Spring Break crowds, wait times for headliners reached “insane” levels:
- Avatar Flight of Passage: Consistently hitting 210 minutes.
- Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance: Maintaining a 180-minute average.
- Slinky Dog Dash: Peaking at nearly 200 minutes by midday.
D’Amaro, a CEO who prides himself on Guest Satisfaction scores, began his first week watching those scores plummet as guests became “queue-captives” in the Florida heat.
4. Violence in the “Village”: The Flamingo Crossings Crisis
Perhaps the most distressing crisis for a CEO who champions his Cast Members was the surge of bizarre violence at Flamingo Crossings Village, the housing complex for the Disney College Program.

The headlines were surreal and deeply un-magical:
- The Popcorn Bucket Assault: On March 20, 2026, a domestic dispute at the complex ended in an arrest after a woman allegedly attacked her ex-boyfriend with a plastic Disney popcorn bucket and a Mickey Mouse-themed sweater before physically restraining him.
- The Frying Pan Incident: Just ten days prior, a roommate dispute ended with a resident being struck in the face with a metal frying pan, leading to a charge of Aggravated Battery.
For D’Amaro, this is more than just a police blotter; it’s a culture crisis. The young adults who are the literal face of the company are living in what residents describe as a “pressure cooker.” D’Amaro is now facing immense pressure to overhaul security and mental health support for the thousands of cast members living on-property.
Conclusion: The Smile vs. The Storm
Josh D’Amaro’s first 168 hours as CEO were a masterclass in baptism by fire. He inherited a $1 billion tech failure, a $50 million programming scandal, a national travel meltdown, and an internal culture crisis.

The Fortune report suggests that D’Amaro’s biggest challenge won't be building new rides like Monstropolis or Tropical Americas, but rather fixing the “un-magical” realities of the 2026 landscape. He has the personality, the $1 billion “war chest,” and the support of a fanbase that desperately wants him to succeed. But as the “popcorn bucket” arrests and the 3-hour lines prove, D’Amaro is running out of time to stabilize the foundations before the magic starts to fade.



