The Walt Disney Company reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings on Tuesday.Theme park profits, which climbed 20 percent, and movie incomes, which soared 21 percent, helped the company beat analysts' estimates for the January through March quarter.Adding to the company's success was the live-action adaptation of Beauty and the Beast. The remake of the 1991 animated movie has become the highest-grossing PG-rated movie of all time in the U.S.A new theme park in China also helped Disney's bottom line. Attendance at the Shanghai park is expected to cross 10 million visitors in the coming days, faster than Disney projected, CEO Bob Iger told analysts in a post-earnings call.And while those results sound pretty cheery, analysts wanted to know more about the state of ESPN. The company's longtime profit engine is slowing down.In the quarter that ended April 1, Disney's media division, which includes ESPN, reported $2.22 billion in operating income, a 3 percent decline.The sports network has been losing subscribers and dealing with higher programming costs. Despite increased advertising sales and subscriber fees, Disney said ESPN was hurt by costs related to college football playoff games and a new contract for the rights to NBA games.Reuters reports:
ESPN Troubles Cloud Disney Earnings; Apple Surpasses $800 Billion Mark
