After perusing some of the reviews of Carl Hiaasen’s “Team Rodent” here on Goodreads, I have to say: some people need to learn how to take a joke.
Not that Hiaasen was, in any way, joking when he wrote the book. No, it’s quite clear he meant every word.
My gripe is with those who don’t seem to understand exactly what Hiaasen was doing, which is what Hiaasen does in all of his books. Namely, he’s being a smart-ass. Emphasis on the “smart”. And, frankly, if you haven’t figured out Hiaasen by now, you should really just stop reading his books entirely.
“Team Rodent” is Hiaasen’s caustic-but-humorous, tongue-in-cheek castigation of the Walt Disney Corporation.
Take note that it’s the corporation that he is attacking here, not the Imagineers, or the park employees, or the people who make those wonderful movies that we (at least those of us with kids) have had to watch 4,372 times.
Also take note that this book was written in 1998. A lot has changed within Disney Corp. since then, most importantly the changing of the guard from Michael Eisner to Bob Iger as CEO. (Iger recently handed off the reins to Bob Chapek.)
Indeed, Hiaasen spends a lot of the book ripping on and viciously dissecting Eisner, and to anybody familiar with Disney-as-a-business, this vicious dissection is perfectly welcome and appreciated, as Eisner nearly sunk Disney.
That Eisner made some serious mistakes and bad decisions in his latter years as CEO is old history. He’s the guy that nearly ruined the marriage between Disney and Pixar. He’s the guy who dumped billions into an American history-themed amusement park that went nowhere. He’s also the guy responsible for the pile of shit film “Man of the House”. (Okay, to be fair, I doubt he had any input—-creative or otherwise—-in the movie, but it happened under his watch, so shame on him.)
But even given how dated this book is, it’s still a fair assessment of a super-powerful mega corporation that is bent on world domination. Disney is an Empire. Period. And Corporate Empires should be mocked, castigated, criticized, and heavily monitored constantly.
Even ones responsible for wonderful films like “Frozen 2” and TV shows like “The Mandalorian”.
So, don’t be so religiously zealous and pro-Disney that one fails to see what Hiaasen is brilliantly trying to do in this book. Take a chill pill, for God’s sake. Or watch “The Mandalorian”. Seriously, Baby Yoda is adorable and will make you forget all your problems…