Disney’s fourth-quarter performance was mixed as a weaker performance from its television networks and some films was buffered by strength in its streaming business and theme parks.

The Walt Disney Co. earned $1.31 billion, or 73 cents per share, for the three months ended Sept. 25. It earned $460 million, or 25 cents per share, in the prior-year period.

Stripping out one-time charges and costs, earnings were $1.11 per share. That’s better than the $1.03 per share that analysts polled by Zacks Investment Research predicted.

Revenue for the Burbank, Calif., company totaled $22.46 billion, short of Wall Street’s estimate of $22.86 billion.

Revenue for Disney Entertainment, which includes the company’s movie studios and streaming service, dropped 6 percent, while revenue for the Experiences division, its parks, climbed 6 percent.

Operating income from linear networks dropped 21 percent and revenue slipped 16 percent.

Disney said that the operating income decline was driven by the Star India transaction, as Star India contributed $84 million to its year-ago results.

Operating income for domestic linear networks fell 7 percent due to lower advertising driven by declines in viewership and political advertising.

Disney said that its movie distribution results were weaker when compared with the same period last year, which was buoyed by “Deadpool & Wolverine” and spillover receipts from “Inside Out 2.”

Films released during the most recent quarter included “The Fantastic Four: First Steps,” “The Roses” and “Freakier Friday.”

Disney’s direct-to-consumer business, which includes Disney+ and Hulu, posted quarterly operating income of $352 million compared with $253 million a year ago. Revenue rose 8 percent.

The Disney+ streaming service had a 3 percent increase in paid subscribers domestically, which includes the Untied States and Canada.

There was a 4 percent rise internationally, which excludes Disney+ HotStar.

Total paid subscribers for Disney+ came to 132 million subscribers, up from 128 million in the third quarter.

Disney+ and Hulu subscriptions totaled 196 million, an increase of 12.4 million from the third quarter.

The strong streaming results come shortly after the entertainment company saw Disney+ and Hulu subscription cancellations climb in September when ABC briefly cancelled “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”

Data from analytics company Antenna showed that Disney+ and Hulu subscription cancellations rose in September when ABC briefly cancelled “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”

Walt Disney Co. owns the streaming platforms and ABC. ABC pulled the show off the air for less than a week in September in the wake of criticism over his comments related to the killing of activist Charlie Kirk.

Prior to the incident, Disney had said in August that it anticipated that total fourth-quarter Disney+ and Hulu subscriptions would increase more than 10 million compared with the third quarter, with most of the increase coming from Hulu due to the expanded Charter deal.

The company had also expected a modest increase in the number of Disney+ subscribers in the fourth quarter.