Starlets, Subscribers and Beneficiaries: Disney, Latino Children and Television Labor

Authors

  • Christopher Chavez University of Oregon
  • Aleah Kiley University of Oregon

Keywords:

children’s television, Disney, Latino, labor, media industry

Abstract

Children’s television networks are invested with moral value not attributed to other networks, yet they depend on the labor of children to advance their economic goals. Using a case study approach of Disney’s cable channels, we found that Latino children perform labor on behalf of the corporation in three ways: as subscribers to Disney’s cable networks, as actors in programming designed to deliver those subscribers, and as beneficiaries in the company’s corporate social responsibility efforts. We found that the logic by which Disney assigns various forms of labor to different types of Latino children helps to advance the company’s economic goals, rendering Latino children hypervisible in some spaces and invisible in others.

Author Biographies

Christopher Chavez, University of Oregon

Christopher Chávez is assistant professor in the School of Journalism and Communication at the University of Oregon. His research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of globalization, markets and culture.

Aleah Kiley, University of Oregon

Aleah Kiley is a graduate student in Media Studies at the University of Oregon. Her research interests are focused on media industry practices and the ways in which they are informed by dominant constructions of gender, sexuality, and race. She holds a BA in Film and Digital Media and MSW from CSU Sacramento.

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Published

2016-05-25

Issue

Section

Articles