In an interview with Variety, the Activision Blizzard CEO claims that the company has been mischaracterised, and blames aggressive unions.
Well, look whoās on the front cover of Variety this week. Itās Bobby Kotick, and heās here to tell us that actually everything is fine at Activision Blizzard, thankyouverymuch. Any bad things you might have heard are probably āmischaracterisationsā.
As a reminder, Activision Blizzard has faced multiple lawsuits over the past few years over claims of widespread sexism, harassment and discrimination at the company.
“We’ve had every possible form of investigation done. And we did not have a systemic issue with harassment — ever. We didn’t have any of what were mischaracterizations reported in the media,” Kotick says in the interview. “But what we did have was a very aggressive labor movement working hard to try and destabilize the company.”
Ah, so it was the unions all along. Well, Iām glad thatās been settled.
Unconvinced of Kotickās defence, Andy Chalk at PC Gamer has put together an excellent analysis of the CEOās various statements in the Variety feature, and how they square with the companyās actual actions when it comes to harassment lawsuits and dealing with unions.
Kotick also vehemently denies allegations raised by a Wall Street Journal investigation that alleged, among other things, that he had known for years about sexual harassment at the company. āI wouldn’t be sitting here talking to you if any of what you read in the inflammatory narrative was truthful,ā Kotick told Variety.
Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier thinks that Kotick got off lightly in the interview. āI am a big fan of journalists aiming to offer a more nuanced perspective on someone who is usually portrayed as a cartoon villain,ā he said in a tweet, ābut the lack of reporting diligence in this piece (no follow-ups or specifics on the WSJ allegations) is a massive failure.ā
He continues: āBK says the union was āworking hard to try and destabilize the company.ā Why no follow-up or investigation? Does he have proof? What if heās actually right? This sort of journalistic malpractice hurts everybody, including, ironically, the subject of the puff piece.ā
Read more: Companies are not your friends