When Disney bought Web video network Maker Studios last year, it paid $500 million up front and said it might pay up to $450 million more if Maker hit certain goals.
Maker Studios Gets Its First Report Card From Disney
Disney will pay Maker Studios backers an earn-out bonus of $105 million. Maker could have made $200 million.


Now we know that’s not going to happen.
After months of wrangling, Disney and Maker have reached an agreement on the results of the first of two earn-out periods. Disney will pay Maker backers $105 million, out of a potential earn-out goal of $200 million, for Maker’s performance through the end of 2014. That brings Disney’s total payout for Maker to $600 million so far. (Thanks to Sarah Ullman, a former Maker employee who writes about Web video at The Jungle, for the tip.)
Maker shareholders have the chance to earn up to $250 million more if the video unit hits certain goals in 2015. But as I reported earlier this month, things have gotten bumpy for Disney and Maker, and there’s not a lot of optimism that Maker will get its $250 million; another 50 percent payment might be more realistic.
Another sign of potential problems with the Disney/Maker deal: Yesterday Erin McPherson, Maker’s chief content officer, left “per mutual agreement with the company.” Maker marketing head Jeremy Welt is also out.
Here’s a more upbeat note: Maker has spent some of its Disney money on a new Web series produced by Key and Peele’s excellent Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, featuring a cameo from both men as producers very interested in “anything at all that would sell to the 18-to-34 demographic.” Here’s an episode of “Ithamar Has Nothing to Say”:
This article originally appeared on Recode.net.











