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Hollywood layoffs 2026: Disney, Sony, Bad Robot slash jobs in a bruising week for the entertainment industry

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April is off to a bruising start for people working in Hollywood. Since the month began, two major studios and one of Hollywood’s most high-profile production companies have announced layoffs totaling more than 1,000 jobs combined.

The job cuts come at a time of great volatility in the movie and television industry, which is facing disruption from AI while also experiencing a rapidly changing business landscape and consolidation. Here’s what you need to know.

Bad Robot to cut jobs as it leaves L.A. for New York

The April layoffs began with an unexpected announcement from one of Hollywood’s most successful and high-profile production companies. On April 2, Variety reported that J.J. Abrams’s Bad Robot Productions would soon begin downsizing.

Hollywood Reporter also reported the downsizing, citing a source. Fast Company reached out to Bad Robot for comment.

Bad Robot has been a Hollywood staple for nearly 30 years and has helped bring some of the most successful television and film projects to the screen, large and small. Its credits include Alias, Lost, and Fringe for television, and Cloverfield, Mission: Impossible, and Star Trek and Star Wars movies for the big screen.

While sources told Variety that the company’s downsizing was underway, it is unknown how many Bad Robot employees would lose their jobs. Layoffs are expected to be “across-the-board” rather than affecting any one division of Bad Robot.

One of the factors underpinning the downsizing is the fact that J.J. Abrams is planning to move Bad Robot from its current base in Los Angeles to New York, where the production company will continue to work on television and film projects.

Sony Pictures lays off hundreds in priority shift

Less than a week after news of Bad Robot’s layoffs broke, Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) reportedly announced that it was cutting jobs. As reported by the Hollywood Reporter, “hundreds” of positions at Sony Pictures Entertainment are expected to go.

While SPE did not specify an exact number, the studio’s CEO, Ravi Ahuja, confirmed the layoffs in a memo to employees, according to THR. In the memo, Ahuja said that Sony Pictures was “reducing roles in certain areas while increasing focus and investment in others that are most critical to our future.”

The memo went on to suggest that the job cuts were not a cost-cutting measure but rather a strategic shift in priorities at the company.

Fast Company reached out to SPE for comment.

Sony is one of the few Hollywood giants that does not own its own major streaming service, although it owns a smaller anime-focused one called Crunchyroll. Instead, Sony produces its own original content and then sells that content to major streamers like Netflix and other platforms.

One of the strategic shifts mentioned by Ahuja includes “accelerated growth” in the company’s PlayStation game IP adaptations and anime IP.

Disney’s new CEO to lay off around 1,000 employees

Then just yesterday, news broke that the Walt Disney Company would lay off up to 1,000 of its workers. As reported by the Wall Street Journal, Deadline, and others, the layoffs represent the first major actions Disney has taken since its new CEO, Josh D’Amaro, took the reins last month.

According to Deadline, many of the cuts are being driven by the company’s move to consolidate its marketing operations between its film, TV, and streaming operations, with the goal of eliminating duplicate roles.

Fast Company reached out to Disney for comment.

While the layoffs of around 1,000 employees represent just a tiny fraction of Disney’s 230,000-strong workforce, they will undoubtedly hit morale yet again.

Over the past several years, Disney has announced repeated rounds of layoffs, including more than 7,000 in 2023 alone.

April’s layoffs come at a time of great upheaval in Hollywood

The layoffs announced since the beginning of this month are sure to cause anxiety and consternation in the industry, which has undergone rapid change in recent years.

Not only is Hollywood grappling with streaming becoming the dominant delivery vehicle for its shows and movies, undercutting theatrical distribution and once-lucrative ad-supported network television, it also faces uncertainty over AI, which many fear will further disrupt the way movies and TV get made.

Meanwhile, Hollywood is also rapidly consolidating.

After months of aggressively pursuing a takeover bid for Warner Bros. since December, Netflix abruptly dropped out of the race in February after Paramount Skydance submitted an even more lucrative bid for Warner Bros. that included Discovery.  

This move, which has yet to be approved by regulatory bodies, portends significant changes in the industry in the years ahead, with fears that a merged Paramount Skydance-Warner Bros. Discovery could lead to job cuts at both companies.

If that’s the case, April’s jobs cuts won’t be the last Hollywood sees.

This story is developing…

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