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    Steve Jobs family absent from Disney board despite stake

    (Reuters) - When Disney shareholders vote to re-elect directors at its annual meeting in March, neither Steve Jobs' wife nor a representative from his trust will be on the ballot, even though the trust is the media company's largest shareholder.

    According to Walt Disney Co's proxy, filed on Friday, directors standing for re-election include Robert Iger, Disney's president and chief executive; Aylwin Lewis, the president and CEO of Potbelly Sandwich Works and a former executive at Sears and Kmart; and Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook Inc.

    Jobs' wife, Laurene, is absent from the list and none of the members standing for re-election represents his estate.

    Jobs, who passed away in October, had been on Disney's board since May 2006, when Disney bought his company Pixar. Jobs, best known for founding Apple Inc, passed away at the age of 56 after a long battle with pancreatic cancer.

    He was enlisted for the Disney board to help provide guidance and help steer the media company through the digital disruption that was wreaking havoc on its business.

    Disney, which generates some $40 billion in annual revenue, is grappling with global economic uncertainty and its impact on its three largest divisions: media, its movie studio and theme park resorts. Its brands include Disney, ABC and ESPN.

    In its proxy filing on Friday, Disney said that 10 of its 11 current board members would stand for re-election.

    Representatives for Disney did not immediately respond to inquiries about whether Jobs' wife or a member of his trust was offered a seat on its board. Apple declined to comment about whether they were offered or turned down a position in Steve Jobs' absence.

    The Steven P. Jobs Trust is Disney's largest shareholder, owning nearly 137.3 million shares, or 7.7 percent of the company's common stock, according to the proxy.

    Shares of Disney closed at $39.31 on Friday, valuing the Jobs Trust's stake at roughly $5.37 billion.

    The proxy, as it has in past years, showed that Jobs did not receive any compensation for his role on the Disney board, per his request.

    The only Disney board member not up for re-election, Chairman John Pepper Jr., announced back in October that he plans to step down from the board at the upcoming annual meeting, set to be held on March 13 in Kansas City, Missouri.

    Iger, who has run Disney since October 2005, will take on the additional title of chairman at the meeting. He is expected to step down as CEO in March 2015.

    Iger's compensation rose 13 percent in fiscal 2011, boosted by an increase in his annual cash bonus and incentive plan, according to Disney's proxy. Iger, 60, saw his total compensation including pension benefits top $33.4 million in the 12 months to September 2011, when Disney's financial year ended.

    Apple has been expanding the scope of its computers, iPhones and iPad tablets in the months since Jobs' death. The iPad appeared to be a hot seller during the recent holiday season, and Apple's quarterly results are due to be released on Tuesday.

    Last Thursday, the company took a big jump into the digital textbooks market with the launch of its iBooks 2 software, aiming to revitalize the U.S. education market and quicken the adoption of its market-leading iPad in that sector. The move pits Apple against Amazon.com Inc and other content and device makers that have made inroads into the estimated $8 billion market with their electronic textbook offerings.

    Terry McGraw, CEO of McGraw-Hill Cos Inc, one of the textbook publishers working with Apple, said he had been talking to Jobs and his team since last June about recreating textbooks as applications.

    (Reporting by Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Editing by Peter Lauria and Eric Walsh)

     
    • Raleigh  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Why isn't the media attacking the compensation plans of this company's executives? Oh, never mind.
    • Diogenes  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      The late Roy Disney saw the writing on the Wall. He tried to oust Michael Eisner because the CEO was raping the Disney Company. You think $33 Million is a lot of compensation for Iger? Eisner pulled out A BILLION DOLLARS after all was said and done. Too many termites are steering the Disney Flagship the wrong way.
    • peter  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      This is a question for a business site, not a Reuters' phony like jessica wohl. What would be much more interesting is why there are so many fools in our Country who will pay the better part of $100 to stand in line at an amusement park or football / basketball game or concert, etc.? I make enough to be in the 50% who pay some taxes and I can't afford to take my family to such venues yet I see pictures of so many drones who somehow can.
    • Jim  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      LMAO. These comments crack me up. Idiots.
    • PS-Vita  •  Paris, France  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      The best part is the comments section. :)
    • phillythekid  •  Dexter, New Mexico  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      ..dang..these people throw around the words..billions..millions..like it was spare change...
    • Mike M  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Somebody dies and automatically everyone wants to make them out to be saints. How come no one's talking about the factories the size of five football fields in China where women and children as young as twelve years old are making iphones and ipads by hand for pennies? It's almost like slave labor. Thier working conditions are about the same as garment workers were in America in the twenties. There's your tender underbelly to the Steve Jobs the God of us all yall story.
    • norm  •  Englewood, Colorado  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      "Iger's compensation rose 13 percent in fiscal 2011"
      That means the first 330,000 visitors at $100 each to the theme park just covers his wages and compensation alone, disgusting.
    • Pachdad  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Members of a Board of Directors should have the skill necessary to guide a company. Mere ownership of shares should never be the sole criteria. The Jobs have the opportunity to make their wishes known by voting their large number of shares, and influencing other shareholders.
    • DT  •  Austin, Texas  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Robt Iger, CEO and President of Disney made $33 MILLION DOLLARS LAST YEAR. Really, what a bankrupt society we live in.
    • Guy SF  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Just because he sat on the board doesn't mean she or the estate has to now sit on the board. The point of a board is to bring guidance. She wasn't (and isn't now) the brain of Apple. She or the estate have nothing to offer the board.
    • Laurie  •  Modesto, California  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      As another poster mentioned. Mr Jobs knew what he was doing and this was all discussed with his family over the months that he was ill, wouldn't one think.
    • CW  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      They'll unload the stake; That is the smartest; Cash-out. Diversify.
    • PeterS  •  San Diego, California  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Apple Heirs not there....maybe they have LIVES. If you're worth that much money, is it really healthy to worry about ANYTHING that Disney does? What is the point of this article? Perhaps they have a HEALTHY attitude about their money. The Billionaire AppleHeirs don't care? Good for them!!!
    • Fernando  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Did I read that right ? Did he say 40billion and still struggling? #$%$ is wrong with this company ? That should be the real question.
    • Buds  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      $2.75 million dollars a month in total compensation, while the employees that make the money for Disney get poverty level wages! Corporate greed at its best!
    • sketch  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Can someone explain to me what the ramifications are for Jobs' trust being absent? I couldn't excavate that information from this rubble-strewn story.
    • Unbelievable  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      For everyone who bought a Mac or iSomething. They're playing with your money.
    • William S  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Iger gets a 13% increase, what do the Disney slaves get 0%.
    • Oops_try_again  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Maybe Jobs family won't be there, but Im sure Syracuse University and Jim Boeheim will be. There's no better time than at a shareholders meeting to thank Mr Iger and Disney for having ESPN keep criminal evidence under wraps until the statute to bring molestation charges had expired.
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