Content Warning: This piece contains some descriptions of sexual assault.
08.01.2024 - 13:29 / rockpapershotgun.com / Bobby Kotick
An unnamed former Activision executive is taking the Call of Duty publisher to court in California, accusing the company of age discrimination and violating the state's whistleblower protection law. Said executive is a 57-year-old who worked at the company from 2014; apparently, he and six other men aged 47 or older were cut from a team of 200, as part of broader Activision Blizzard restructuring efforts last August.
As reported by law360, the lawsuit cites statements allegedly made by recently-departed Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick to the effect that "there are too many old white guys" at the company, and claims that two white executives left the company shortly afterwards "based, at least in part, on Kotick's ageist remarks".
According to the suit, one of the above departing execs recommended the plaintiff as his replacement, but Activision Blizzard promoted a younger non-white employee instead, who became the plaintiff's manager. The manager in question is said to have criticised the plaintiff's work in such a way that his merit-based base salary increase for that year was the lowest he received during his tenure at the company.
The suit also claims that a woman in the plaintiff's department made false and defamatory remarks about him to human resources and his manager, while complaining about her own merit-based salary increase being lower than expected. The plaintiff filed his own complaint with HR in response, accusing Activision Blizzard of failing to protect him from "discriminatory and defamatory accusations" and calling for "checks and balances" while insisting "that a larger issue might be brewing". He says this complaint was ignored.
In summary, the plaintiff is asking for damages to make up for loss of earnings, negative impact to career advancement, damage to his reputation, emotional distress and wrongful termination, as well as legal costs.
On paper, much of this has me grasping for the smallest of violins. Whatever Kotick has said or not said, it doesn't feel like white guys are an especially endangered species at Activision, or indeed anywhere else. According to the company's most recent Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Look-Back report, 73% of the company's workforce were male as of 2022, and 61% of their US workforce were white. If there's a broader campaign against white guys at the House of COD, they're keeping it fairly quiet.
I feel more sympathetic about the accusations of ageism, which is a problem that affects a variety of industries in complex ways. In a video last year, one of Fallout's original designers Timothy Cain called it "the last publicly acceptable discrimination" in game development (if you like that video, Jeremy Peel also interviewed Cain about his
Content Warning: This piece contains some descriptions of sexual assault.
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A former Activision Blizzard executive is suing the company for age discrimination, according to lawsuit filed on Jan. 2. James Reid Venable, a 57-year-old former senior director of business operations, said Activision Blizzard “retaliated and discriminated” against him after he made a discrimination complaint to the company’s human resources department — specifically, Venable believes he was laid off for being old and white.