Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Fans Appalled After Woman Who Literally Saved 'Toy Story 2' Is Laid Off From Pixar

Galyn Susman; Toy Story 2
Neil Mockford/FilmMagic; Disney/Pixar

Producer Galyn Susman saved the Pixar movie back in 1998 after an employee accidentally deleted most of the film's files.

Disney fans are outraged after the company's latest round of layoffs included a bona fide hero.

Pixar producer Galyn Susman was among some 75 Pixar employees let go last month. Susman's tenure at Pixar saw her overseeing a long list of classic films for the iconic animation studio, including Ratatouille, Toy Story 4 and Lightyear.


But those don't hold a candle to what is arguably her magnum opus—saving 1999's Toy Story 2 from near total destruction.

As the video below reveals, Toy Story 2 came very close to a total and catastrophic loss.

In 1998, an employee accidentally deleted the entire film from Pixar's servers.

youtu.be

The story goes an employee working on the film entered a wrong command into one of the company's systems, deleting all of the film's files.

Enter Susman swooping in like Buzz Lightyear to save the day.

Susman was working from home at the time because she was on maternity leave, and, as befits her title of technical director at the time, she just happened to have a backup of the film in her home office.

If it hadn't been for Susman, there very well may not have been a Toy Story 2—or at least it would have been delayed for years while the team painstakingly rebuilt the whole thing. Instead, it went on to make roughly half a billion dollars for Disney and Pixar and became the highest-grossing animated film of 1999.

But in the end that wasn't enough to keep Susman around and fans on Twitter were incensed about it.









Disney and Pixar's latest round of layoffs are part of Disney CEO Bob Iger's plan to cut $5.5 billion in costs by laying off some 7,000 workers at the beleaguered studio, which has had a handful of film's with disappointing box office and poor critical reception including last year's Lightyear.

The layoffs also included Lightyear director Angus MacLane.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Paul Castle; 'The Secret Ingredient' children's book cover
@matthewandpaul/TikTok, Paul Castle Studio

TikTokers Rally Behind Blind Author Whose Inclusive Kids' Book Got Review-Bombed By Conservatives

The author of an inclusive-inspired children's book received tons of support from the internet after his book was banned from a bookstore and review-bombed by conservatives.

Paul Castle is a blind influencer who wrote and illustrated a children's book called The Secret Ingredient. It is about two male penguins who adopt a baby and discover "the secret ingredients" to being a happy family.

Keep ReadingShow less
Two king penguins
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images

Wildlife Park Renames Penguin They Thought Was Female After It Turns Out To Be A Gay Male

A UK wildlife park renamed a king penguin they thought was female after some confusion concerning her inability to lay eggs. After observing the penguin constantly flirting with another male penguin, staffers realized it was a gay male.

Birdland Park and Gardens in Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire, is home to the UK's only king penguin breeding colony.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.; Amaryllis Fox Kennedy
Rebecca Noble/Getty Images; Tristar Media/Getty Images

We Now Know The Real Reason RFK Jr. Is Pushing For His Daughter-In-Law To Help Run The CIA

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is facing criticism for pushing President-elect Donald Trump to hire his daughter-in-law Amaryllis Fox Kennedy to be Deputy Director of the CIA after an exclusive Axios report revealed he is doing so because he believes the CIA had a role in assassinating his uncle, President John F. Kennedy.

SCOOP: RFK Jr.'s daughter-in-law is making a push to serve as deputy director at the CIA next year — and RFK Jr. is making calls on her behalf.

[image or embed]
— Axios (@axios.com) December 10, 2024 at 3:23 PM


Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of YesMadam Logo and YesMadam's email to employees
YesMadam

Company's Stunt Claiming Workers Were Fired For Having 'Stress At Work' Awkwardly Backfires

Home salon services company YesMadam sparked immediate backlash after claiming they surveyed employees about their workplace stress before sending out an email letting those stressed workers know they were fired—except YesMadam claims it was a marketing stunt gone wrong.

An initial post alleged that YesMadam had dismissed approximately 100 employees following the results of a mental health survey indicating widespread workplace stress. Anushka Dutta, identified as an employee, shared a leaked email from the HR department on LinkedIn.

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift
Emma McIntyre/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management

Taylor Swift Gave Massive Bonuses To Everyone Who Worked On 'Eras Tour'—And Fans Are Applauding

Taylor Swift's monumental The Eras Tour has come to a conclusion after 21 months of performing around the globe.

The tour itself raked in over $2 billion in sales, performing to around 10 million people. The singer has, accordingly, rewarded those crew who helped the massive endeavor go well with bonuses totaling about 10% of overall sales.

Keep ReadingShow less