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| Daniel J. Cerqueira dcerqueira@cravath.com T +212-474-1156 New York | 
| Re: | Walt Disney Co Definitive Additional Soliciting Materials Filed March 13, 2024File No. 001-38842 | 
| 1. | Each statement or assertion of opinion or belief must be clearly characterized as such, and a reasonable factual basis must exist for each such opinion or belief.  Support for
                  opinions or beliefs should be self-evident, disclosed in the proxy statement or provided to the staff on a supplemental basis.  Please provide the support described for your disclosure that: | 
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| ● | CNBC, Last Call: “The con [about Peltz joining Disney’s Board] is that he doesn’t have particular media experience. I went through the entire White Paper and there are not that many new ideas in there.”1 | 
| ● | The Information: “Peltz says if he is elected to Disney’s board, he’ll “insist” on a streaming strategy that would generate “Netflix-like” profit margins. He also says he would “explore
                  opportunities” to improve “engagement and cost structure,” and would “evaluate Disney’s organizational structure to improve accountability and efficiency.” It all sounds like the kind of vagueness you’d expect from a political candidate.”2 | 
| ● | CNBC, Squawk on the Street: “[Trian’s presentation] has a lot of what, but not a lot of how. Look at Trian when they went after Dupont, P&G, Heinz… They came in with a real plan there in
                  terms of execution and operations as opposed to here where it’s saying: ‘The Board has failed; we need to be on the Board.”3 | 
| ● | Barron’s: “It is unclear how a Peltz board presence would help. The ideas that Trian has proposed seem to fall into three categories: vague, odd, and already in motion.”4 | 
| ● | Trian claims that it will fix the succession process and run a thorough and successful search for a CEO in time for Mr. Iger’s 2026 retirement. (Trian’s White Paper, page 26.) Disney has stated in
                  multiple instances that the Board and Mr. Iger remain actively engaged in the high-priority work of succession planning. Disney’s proxy statement for the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “Proxy Statement”) details the
                  actions taken by Disney from the beginning of 2023 and year to date 2024 to progress its management succession planning under the section entitled “Management Succession Planning.”  Not only is this an area that Disney is already focused
                  on, but Trian also fails to identify any concrete action items to “fix” the succession process and to identify a new CEO. | 
| ● | Trian states that it will align pay with performance by tying the compensation program to outcomes that drive long-term shareholder value. (Trian’s White Paper, page 26.) As disclosed in the Proxy Statement, Disney’s Compensation Committee seeks to align pay with performance when making compensation decisions, and believes that most of the compensation for Disney’s named executive officers should be at risk and tied to a combination of long-term and short-term Company performance. As further described in the section entitled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” of the Proxy Statement, 96% of Mr. Iger’s compensation is at-risk and 85% of other name executive officers’ compensation is at risk. Therefore, what Trian claims to achieve with respect to executive compensation has already been implemented in Disney’s approach to executive compensation, demonstrating Trian’s lack of understanding of Disney and failure to present any new ideas. | 
| ● | Trian claims that it will insist management develop and articulate a clear DTC strategy with tangible goals that will achieve Netflix-like margins of 15-20% by 2027.  (Trian’s White Paper, page 26.) Disney has stated in multiple
                    instances that it plans to achieve profitability in its streaming business by end of fiscal year 2024, within five years of launching Disney+, which is well ahead of Netflix’s timeline.  Disney has also added significant DTC streaming
                    capabilities, creating the strongest bundle across the industry with higher engagement and lower churn versus its peers.  Not only does this demonstrate Trian’s lack of understanding of Disney and its industry, Trian also fails to
                    articulate any concrete plans for how it will guide Disney to Netflix-like margins, but rather spends several slides only criticizing Disney’s streaming business historical performance. | 
| ● | Trian claims that it will lead a Board-led review of studio operations and culture.  Disney believes that a Board-led creative review process is value destructive, and by restoring authority to creative leaders (as it has done),
                    Disney is improving efficiency, accountability and effectiveness. (Trian’s White Paper, page 26.) This proposal, which would impede the creative engines that are foundational to the Company, demonstrates Trian’s lack of understanding of
                    the Company and its business. | 
| ● | Trian claims that ESPN would benefit from having a bundling partner such as Netflix, our biggest streaming competitor, or another regional sports network, and that it will insist on a digital
                  strategy for ESPN that has a clear path to attractive financial returns. (Trian’s White Paper, page 116.) Disney believes that ESPN is a clear differentiator versus other peers, including Netflix.  Sports is a core element of Disney’s
                  streaming bundle and Disney has demonstrated concrete progress with respect to ESPN, including announcing a sports JV with WBD and Fox and a JV in India with Reliance and Viacom18, which the Company believes have strengthened its
                  positioning in sports. Trian’s proposal would combine one of Disney’s most valuable assets with those of a strong competitor, which would weaken Disney’s differentiation and competitive offering, further demonstrating Trian’s lack of
                  understanding of Disney and its industry. | 
| ● | Trian claims that it will explore opportunities to improve DTC engagement and cost structure, including changes to product and marketing strategies and reducing redundant overhead costs.  (Trian’s White Paper, page 26.) In the last
                    fiscal year, Disney restructured and made important efficiency improvements to create a more cost-effective, coordinated and streamlined approach to its operations.  Disney aggressively cut costs across the entire enterprise, putting
                    the Company on track to achieve roughly $7.5 billion in cost savings by the end of fiscal year 2024, which is approximately $2 billion more than initially expected in February 2023.  Disney has also repeatedly stated that it is
                    continuing to seek additional efficiencies without compromising commitment to quality, growth and value creation.  Therefore, Trian’s proposal of exploring opportunities to cost structure is nothing new. | 
| 2. | You must avoid issuing statements that directly or indirectly impugn the character, integrity or personal reputation or make charges of illegal, improper or immoral conduct
                  without factual foundation.  Provide us supplementally, or disclose, the factual foundation for your statements listed below.  In this regard, note that the factual foundation for such assertions must be reasonable.  Refer to Rule 14a-9. | 
| ● | CNBC Squawk on the Street (David Faber Compares Trian-Elliot White Papers): During this coverage, David Faber highlighted “significant similarities” between Trian’s white paper and
                      Elliott’s past presentations, while displaying slides from both presentations side-by-side on the broadcast, and commenting “it was very similar in style and scope to Elliott’s white paper”.8 | 
| ● | Puck, What I’m Hearing: “Plagiarism in the Peltz Papers?: Investor Nelson Peltz and his Trian firm finally released all 130 pages of their glorious white paper on how to fix
                          Disney. But astute observers have noticed a surprising and somewhat hilarious similarity in look and feel between the Peltz Papers and proxy documents put out by Elliot Investment Management, another activist investor firm. Fonts,
                          concepts, slide layout, the “Restore the…” motif. It’s all basically the same. Not a great look if Peltz is concerned about Disney making bad sequels.” 9 | 
| ● | The Deal: Activist Daily Briefing: “Double Duty? A comparison of Trian’s Disney slides to Elliott Management presentations at Crown Castle, Arconic and another campaign shows that the Nelson Peltz-led activist fund
                        employed the Paul Singer-led fund’s deck style and structure at times as inspiration for its House of Mouse presentation. Hmm...” 10 | 
| Sincerely, | ||
| /s/ Daniel J. Cerqueira | ||
| Daniel J. Cerqueira | ||
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