Some More News - SMN: Warner Bros. Discovery And The New Batch Of Mergers
Episode Date: November 16, 2022Hi. In today's episode, we explore the Warner Bros. Discovery merger and the accelerating trend of corporate consolidation. But, there are hopeful signs that the Brandon Justice D...epartment is taking antitrust action seriously. Please fill out our SURVEY: https://kastmedia.com/survey/ Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh  Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1y... Secure your online data TODAY by visiting https://www.ExpressVPN.com/morenews and you can get an extra three months FREE. Get 20% off and Free Shipping at https://www.manscaped.com/MORENEWS. Manscaped, get your Jingle balls ready for the Holidays. Get to the root of stress with the Stress CBD Complex from NextEvo Naturals. For up to 25% off subscription orders of $40 or more, use promo code MORENEWS at https://www.NextEvo.com.Support the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey there, newsies.
You know what's the only thing better than some news?
More news!
And here is some more news.
It is, of course, the 32-year, four-month, and one-day anniversary of the hit film Gremlins 2,
The New Batch, starring Zach Gallagher and Phoebe Cates and even horror icon Christopher Lee.
Howie Mandel is the voice of Gizmo and John Glover as Daniel Clamp,
the real estate millionaire and Trump analog,
with the exception that Clamp is portrayed
as less of a sinister dope and more of a naive cog
in an otherwise destructive force
that is corporate surveillance and homogeneity
disguised as futurism.
Not to mention the running theme of profit interest
and business culture,
steamrolling the unique and artistic,
such as the beginning when Clamp literally tears down the mysterious Chinatown shop
in which the Mogwai originate.
Also, there's a fuckable gremlin this time.
Anywho, director Joe Dante was offered a ridiculous amount of money and freedom from Warner Brothers
after the studio failed several times to make a sequel without him.
He was, of course, the director of
the first film. As a response, Dante created a sequel specifically about how the original Gremlins
did not need a sequel. In a lot of ways, Warner Brothers is the villain of Gremlins 2, represented
by the Clamp Empire bulldozing and then Disney-fying authentic spaces in an attempt to maximize their wallets by sucking
the marrow from everything they touch. Did I mention the fuckable gremlin? The gremlins themselves,
of course, represent the pushback from this. The authentic rebelling, in this case,
classic creature features originating from a lab run by Christopher Lee. And what I find very
interesting about this movie, besides the fuckable gremlin, is that in the 32 years, four months,
and one day since it came out,
it appears that nothing has actually changed
with how Warner Brothers demands sequels.
I'm sure you can understand
why our beloved parent company, Warner Brothers,
has decided to make a sequel to the trilogy.
What?
They informed me they're gonna do it with or without us.
That is a scene from 2021's The Matrix Resurrections,
where Lana Wachowski practically stood on camera
and told the audience that Warner Brothers
was going to make a Matrix sequel
with or without her involvement.
This movie was released the same year as Space Jam 2,
in which the villain is a literal algorithm
designed by WB to create watered-down stories.
It seems we have a pattern emerging,
one where the company Warner Brothers is a continued thorn in the side of creatives.
This was punctuated in 2022 when the studio began axing DC projects to the fans' disappointment.
And we're going to talk about all of that, but this isn't just about one company.
No, it's about several companies
squishing together to then make one company, like some kind of hot sex with a gremlin,
if that's what you're into, which you are. Let's talk about mergers.
As always, it's apparently going to be a horny episode.
Okay, so back in April, the new conglomerate Warner Brothers Discovery or WB Discovery formed,
bringing together the assets of Discovery Inc. and Warner Media.
Obviously, a lot of this deal was based around the streaming marketplace and the opportunity to unite HBO Max and Discovery Plus content under one banner.
Because who doesn't want to see Batman finally take on Guy Fieri, a man who wouldn't have to change a thing to become
a Gotham-style villain? It's also functionally an attempt to wind back another earlier mega deal.
Back in 2018, AT&T completed an $85.4 billion acquisition of Time Warner.
This gave the telecommunications giant
access to a huge portfolio of entertainment
and media companies,
including HBO, Warner Brothers, and CNN.
The plan at the time was to use AT&T's trove
of subscriber data to sell targeted advertising
and to use WB's resources to produce fresh content specifically for everyone's
mobile devices. It makes sense, but in a 2018 kind of way. Such innocent times. Today, it sounds like
an extremely antiquated idea embedded within an even more antiquated idea, like trying to sell
custom ringtones for wood carved music boxes.
Though Donald Trump was infamously negative about the deal,
arguing that it concentrated too much power
in the hands of too few.
The DOJ decided not to seek an injunction to hold it up.
A lot of people kind of dismissed his whole argument
as part of a famed, extremely personal grudge against CNN.
And those people were probably right,
you know, considering that Trump was all too happy
to approve the Disney merger with Fox.
But here on the showdy, dare we say,
perhaps both were bad.
Just three years later,
the WB started the process of spinning off
all the media assets it had just purchased
in a deal with Discovery,
birthing the deformed Cronenbergian abomination
that is WB Discovery in the process.
AT&T CEO John Stanky explained
that this would work out pretty well for shareholders
as they'll massively expand their capital base
via the new sale, creating more opportunities.
But it maybe didn't work out so great for,
I wanna say, what was I gonna say?
Ha ha ha, every single other person in the world.
Once the big deal was finalized,
the WB Discovery formed in April of this year.
The new company was saddled with a staggering amount of debt.
We're talking an estimated $53 billion,
most of it coming over from the WarnerMedia side.
So this tiny little newborn company,
barely able to stand on its own power,
just opening its eyes to take in the streaming marketplace
for the very first time,
has to start out its naive young life
by making $3 billion in cuts,
or to be specific, a significant number of layoffs.
So far, the downsizing has impacted WarnerMedia
and Discovery's combined sales teams,
CNN staffers, and development executives
from HBO Max's unscripted international
and live action family divisions,
along with casting and acquisitions executives,
but it's still ongoing.
I feel like my job is on the line
and I'm almost certain I don't work for them, almost.
The process so far has also included
a lot of cost-cutting moves
that sort of almost kind of seem
like they make the core HBO Max Discovery Plus product
significantly worse.
As we mentioned, they shelved an almost completed Batgirl movie,
but also a Scooby-Doo Halloween film
before audiences even got a chance to see them.
Other current or upcoming shows that got the axe
include the high-profile bad robot sci-fi drama,
Demamonde, from Star Wars half-ass or J.J. Abrams,
a planned DC Comics Wonder Twins film,
and basically the entire TBS and TNT lineups.
Do you remember them?
They were cable channels?
Do you remember cable?
It was a box that connected to your TV
that had the old Netflix
with all the Bengay and Imodium ads.
I think it came in through your phone lines?
Do you remember phone lines?
Doesn't ring a bell.
The HBO Max platform has also dropped
a ton of archived library content,
some of which has just disappeared into a digital void,
potentially never to be seen or heard from again.
That includes 200 classic episodes of Sesame Street,
a show that was once
free and aired on public television where it was fueled exclusively by tote bag sales.
Our friends at WBD are also in the process of consolidating Cartoon Network Studios
and WB Animation, leading to additional layoffs, even more canceled projects,
and the disappearance of popular shows like Infinity Train from
the legal non-pirate internet at large.
And all in all, a post-merger WBD took an $825 million tax write-down on content.
According to an October SEC filing, the company plans to spend up to $1.5 billion on efforts
to shrink the company over the next two fiscal years,
including consolidating facilities,
restructuring and contract termination costs.
I mean, you know what they say,
you gotta spend money to lose money.
That's the number one rule
in the Elon Musk book of business,
the apartheid of the deal, whatever.
Who am I kidding?
Those $8 check marks will take off, I'm sure.
Let's be fair and balanced.
We love spending $8 to talk.
Anyway, obviously this WB news
is inherently disappointing for consumers
who are paying the same subscription rates
and consistently being threatened with future price hikes
to view less content.
Not to mention that it's a huge kick in the loins,
or lions as an MGM reference
for all you production title heads out there,
but a kick in the loins for creatives working in fields
like TV animation and digital media.
It also seems like a possible violation
of the DOJ and Federal Trade Commission guidelines
regarding merger enforcement.
These agencies are supposed to consider
whether a merger would incentivize
the newly formed company to, and I quote,
"'Withdraw a product that a significant number
of customers strongly prefer.'"
Concerns about Discovery CEO David Zaslav
and his team stewardship over HBO Max
and the wider WarnerMedia content library started early.
In August, when the company presented their Q2 earnings,
they shared a slide describing HBO Max as male skew,
lean in, and the home of fandoms,
while calling Discovery Plus female skew,
lean back, and house of genre-dums, which is so baffling,
it sort of feels like none of them
have ever watched television before, or like, leaned.
They also posted a slide excitedly touting
the 90-day fiance shared universe of programming,
while seeming to forget entirely
that they also own The Conjuring films,
which have earned around $2.1 billion to date.
Damn, that doesn't even get you on the slide.
Ed and Lorraine Warren have a direct line to the Lord
and that's not good enough for you?
Come on.
That's the series that finally tapped
into mankind's deep seated fear
of being bitten in the face by snakes and drowned by nuns.
in the face by snakes and drowned by nuns.
It's wild how someone can take something innocuous like being drowned by a demon nun
and make it scary like that.
Incredible.
But good, well, not all good news.
These weird corporate decisions might not even come down
to pure incompetence, Some incompetence, sure,
but let's not narrow our options. It's tough not to notice that a lot of the WB Discovery content,
either being canceled outright or pulled from the HBO Max platform, prominently featured members
of underrepresented communities. That Batgirl film would have starred Dominican American actress Leslie Grace as the
titular hero, Batgirl, first for the DC Comics franchise. There's also the case of the Gordita
Chronicles, an HBO Max family comedy series about a 12-year-old Dominican girl adjusting to life in
1980s Miami. According to data analytics group Whip Media, the show ranked among the 10 most popular new comedies
released in 2022,
but it was canceled after just one season.
As showrunner Bridget Munoz-Libowitz
told The Hollywood Reporter,
it's hard not to feel like this is a pattern.
I would think they'd want to grandfather the commitments
they made into their future decision-making
and not alienate the consumers they have. Again, top 10 new comedy. Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro went one step
further, blasting Warner Brothers Discovery Management as outright hostile to creators
of color and accusing them of going out of their way to make the company less inclusive.
He was part of a group of 30 Democratic members of
Congress who actually warned that this specifically might happen as a result of the proposed Warner
Brothers discovery in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland and Jonathan Cantor,
the head of the DOJ's antitrust division, back in December 2021. They wrote,
The media and entertainment industry already suffers from a lack of Hispanic representation in its workforce. Economic justice cannot be realized without ensuring that all communities,
especially low-income and minority communities, are protected from the exploitation and abuse
that often accompanies concentrated economic power. Hey, that's exactly what eventually happened.
Wowee, are they some kind of psychics like the totally legitimate Ed and Lorraine Warren?
Turns out that according to a 2021 UCLA diversity report
Latinos make up about 19% of the country
Yet account for just 6% of roles of scripted shows
With only a few major players in the theatrical movie and streaming space
We can't really afford one whole company to just give up on that audience,
lest all Latino representation be reduced to a single embarrassing episode of the Great British Bake Off.
And all that's just on the scripted content side.
The deal also passed control of the cable news network CNN over to Warner Brothers Discovery,
just as it was reeling from the exit
of longtime president Jeff Zucker
due to an undisclosed romantic relationship
with a colleague.
There's a new position open with the Try Guys though,
so he'll probably be fine.
He'll land on his feet or at least he will try.
But this meant the immediate end to the faltering
and some would say bad idea in general,
CNN Plus streaming service,
which was being viewed by fewer than 10,000 daily users
just two weeks after launch.
Zucker's exit and the pivot away from CNN Plus
meant another heavy round of layoffs.
I mean, sure, of course,
goes without saying at this point.
They're doing layoffs more often
than they have to restock the pantry with fruit snacks.
But it also set the network up for an overall reset
in terms of tone and approach.
And what I mean is, after shutting down CNN+,
the network's next big programming move
was firing media analyst
and frequent Trump critic, Brian Stelter,
the host of one of its most watched shows,
"'Reliable Sources'".
A show and host,
I personally think are not very good.
However, the official line from CNN
was that they're simply restructuring
their Sunday morning schedule in an agenda-free fashion.
Axios reported in June, before Stelter was fired,
that the network was planning to dismiss
some of its more liberal anchors
in order to reset its overall political balance. That report cited Stelter by name. Chris Lick,
the former Late Show with Stephen Colbert showrunner who took over for Zucker, has said
he's aiming for respectful interviews that don't feel like PR stunts. And sure, you don't want
disrespectful interviews on your network, but it's also important
that they find out things
from the people they're interviewing.
As if sensing the impending skepticism
his remarks were going to inspire,
Licht also told CNN staffers in August, 2022,
to expect even more moves you may not agree with
or understand.
Comforting.
It's also worth pointing out the conservative billionaire investor, John Malone,
who not only sits on the board of WB Discovery,
but has been a longtime friend and mentor
to new WB Discovery CEO, David Zaslav.
In fact, Malone was instrumental in the hiring of Zaslav,
then an NBC Universal executive,
to come over and run Discovery back in 2006.
He's the guy's mentor,
and the two of them keep in close touch.
To quote one unnamed CNN employee,
John Malone doesn't watch CNN.
John Malone only watches CNN via Fox News.
If I watched CNN via Fox News, I would hate CNN too.
Not that there aren't valid non-Fox News reasons to hate CNN, but he also memorably once tried to recruit Rush Limbaugh to join the Fox
News team. So yeah, I don't know. Maybe it's bad to have someone who hates CNN because of their
ideological competitor's view of them help make major decisions about CNN. It's just a suggestion, you know, take it or leave it, try it or guy it.
That phrase doesn't make sense.
It's fine.
Mind you, there's no evidence that they've actually colluded to make CNN more conservative
or less liberal or less informative or whatever.
There's no evidence that they are actively cutting minority voices either.
But if these cuts and changes are about money, well, we should point out that it's
not working at all. WB Discovery stock is down more than 50% since the start of 2022. That's
this year. And the company's key counter strategy seems to be announcing a price hike in the middle
of an economic downturn. Things are going so poorly on the stock front
that in September, an Illinois police pension fund
invested in the company filed a class action suit
arguing that they'd been misled
about HBO Max subscriber numbers prior to the merger.
Apparently, AT&T used to count wireless customers
who had the option of signing up for HBO Max
but had not actually done so as HBO Max subscribers.
So, ah, pretty bad when the good guy
in a legal situation is a group of cops.
So to recap, this merger is hurting people
working in the industry,
making the company's products less good,
badder even, and aren't
guaranteed to actually provide a stock boost short-term or otherwise. So why do any of this?
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Listen, look here and listen to my voice.
We were talking about the WB merger
and how it seems to be bad for literally everyone,
but not literally everyone,
as evidenced by CEO David Zaslav's
recent $250 million paycheck,
which we just happen to know about because of Discovery's SEC filings. Zaslav's recent $250 million paycheck, which we just happen to know about because of Discovery's
SEC filings. Zaslav's actual annual salary is just a measly popper like $3 million per year,
but he got all those extra funds from stock awards and what's known as non-equity incentive
plan compensation, which when you Google translate back to English from rich asshole means bonuses.
In 2021, Zaslav received his maximum allowable cash bonus of $22 million, along with a $4.4
million discretionary bonus, which in part recognized his efforts to initiate, negotiate,
and enter into the transaction with the WarnerMedia business. So the board members who
wrote Zaslav's
deal thought this merger was going to make their stock worth a lot more money, and he got paid
$26.4 million specifically to make it happen. They might still be right, if they can strip the
company for enough parts before selling it off to another buyer at a profit. In September, rumors
began circulating that WB Discovery executives are already considering a new merger with NBCUniversal that would integrate the Peacock service in with HBO Max and Discovery+.
They are incorrigible.
Like some kind of, I don't know, fuckable gremlin.
So, yeah.
Money, obviously, but also in terms of the why of this merger,
it's hard not to wonder why the government
like allows stuff like this to happen in general.
And so allow me to genetically form smart guy glasses
after chugging a vial of brain hormone
and explain a little history to you.
Glug, glug, glug.
Oh, the brain pills,
expansion of the brain through the power of stuff.
In the early 20th century,
antitrust actions by the federal government
were largely rare.
There was this depression on, you see, a great one.
And most of the attention was on boosting industry
and economic recovery.
Plus learning the Charleston,
which is trickier than it looks.
The post-World War II era through the 1970s
is sometimes known as the golden age of antitrust.
You know, that classic era
when all your favorite antitrust heroes
used to drive around in regular cars
wearing Lone Ranger masks, punching Nazis.
In this era, healthy competition
was seen as a vital antidote to fascism,
an old historical problem that's thankfully no longer a concern.
No one tell him!
Tell me what, monkey! Ah, never mind.
Today, the entire discussion about corporate consolidation has been boiled down and oversimplified
into a binary choice between unfettered, regulation-free capitalism,
the so-called free market we've all heard so much about,
and excessive government regulation
that's the equivalent to Soviet gulag-style communism.
You have to just pick one or the other.
If you listen to politicians or public intellectuals,
they'll describe this as obvious econ 101 stuff,
the way markets have always been
since the East India Trading Company
was sailing the high seas and paying everyone's wages in grog. For most of the 20th century,
the majority of Western scholars, economists, and experts accepted that under a fascist system,
the government controls the economy either entirely by itself or through state-owned
and controlled companies. And the only way to actually have a truly free market
was through regulations enforcing practices
that ensured fair competition.
The switchover happened extremely recently in the 1970s,
based largely on the ideas of a group of conservative
scholars from the University of Chicago.
They were the ones arguing that perfect ideal competition
emerges naturally and organically from a free market
and requires little to no oversight
or regulation by outside parties.
Under this line of thinking,
businesses should merge anytime it's profitable
for their shareholders to do so.
And the only reason the government
should ever step in to stop them
is if it's going to cause prices
for consumers to skyrocket.
This is known as the consumer welfare standard.
Right or wrong, it's wrong, but bear with me for a second. Right or wrong, this line of thinking
has dominated U.S. economic policy ever since its introduction, particularly after the Reagan
administration virtually eliminated Section 2 cases involving monopolies in the 1980s.
That specific section of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 makes it
illegal for one company to monopolize or conspire to monopolize an entire industry.
And it empowers the federal government to break up concentrated power that's being used to
unfairly block competition, fix prices, or gain competitive advantage. Prior to the
rockin' Ronnie years, Section 2 was applied to a broad range of conduct,
including bundled rebates, fraudulent patents,
exclusionary product design, exclusive dealing,
expanding of manufacturing capacity beyond what's needed,
patent abuse, predatory pricing, price discrimination,
price squeezes, refusals to deal fairly with competitors,
refusing to share essential facilities with competitors,
using dominant market positions to gain unfair advantage,
and vertical foreclosure.
Legally, everyone from the Department of Justice
to the Federal Trade Commission
to even state attorneys general
have the authority to enforce federal laws
by bringing Section 2 cases against companies.
Private parties can even sue companies in federal court
to enforce Section 2.
But even so, almost no Section 2 cases
have been brought since the 80s.
How odd.
Also odd that Ronald Reagan, as you might know,
was originally an actor whose big break
was the film Love Is On The Air,
a Warner Brothers film.
Coincidence?
Yes?
That is correct.
It was just a coincidence.
Still, the last major Section 2 case
actually pursued by the DOJ itself
was US v. Microsoft in 1998.
There are retired professional athletes younger than that.
Under the modern standard,
plaintiffs are expected to demonstrate
not just an attempt to consolidate monopoly-style power, as it actually says in the text of the law,
but to further prove an anti-competitive effect. To meet this exceptionally high burden of proof,
it's not even enough to show that a company exercised monopoly power to hurt their competitors.
That's just the first step. You then have to convince a judge that the company
knowingly acted unfairly, and that its negative actions outweighed any potential good that the
company may have done through these same practices. And even if you can actually prove all of that in
court, many conservative judges will still find new and exciting ways to let companies off the hook,
often by narrowing their definitions of the relevant market
or just ignoring parts of the argument
that they don't particularly care for.
Imagine if, to charge a guy with drunk driving,
you had to not only show that he got behind the wheel drunk,
but that he started off the evening planning to drive drunk
and that the harm experienced by the three people
he almost hit with his car outweighs the benefit experienced by the three people he almost hit with his car
outweighs the benefit experienced
by the two people he gave a lift home to.
Also, imagine that you're making this argument
in a world where a big chunk of judges think driving
after a few beers is like totally cool, bro.
And you start to understand the ridiculous stifling effect
we're putting on prosecutors
who have to fight against monopolies.
Bear in mind too, Congress also does everything it can
to limit the ability of states and individuals
to bring their own Section 2 cases,
especially via class action suits.
As a result of massively significant sea changes like these,
more than 75% of US industries have become more concentrated and consolidated
over the last few decades.
It started in manufacturing, media, banks, and retail,
but has since spread to tech, telecommunications,
defense, and agriculture.
America currently leads the world
in merger and acquisition activity,
accounting for nearly half of the $5.8 trillion
in global deal-making in 2021.
In 2019, the National Bureau of Economic Research found a significant increase in what they
call negative concentration, meaning consolidation within an industry that's paired with weaker
productivity and declining rates of investment.
Telephone and broadband services are good examples here.
The industry has become significantly
more consolidated over time.
And as a result,
US consumers pay nearly twice as much
for phone and internet services
as residents of other developed countries.
So along with paying a lot for subscription services
like HBO Max,
we also pay even more for cable companies
to enjoy such blood chilling scenes
as this.
Really just incredible how they took a subtle idea
like a nun roaring like a lion before exploding a mirror
and somehow made it shocking, masterful filmmaking.
Anyway, in the 1990s, the US was more competitive
than Europe in this sector. But now European markets have
lower excess profits and fewer barriers to entry. And crucially, this was no accident. In France,
there was an oligopoly in phone service with just three carriers functionally controlling the entire
telecom industry. But it was broken up in 2011 when a new operator was granted a license and prices dropped by 50% within just two years.
Presidents Obama and Trump both spoke frequently
about the importance of antitrust actions,
but neither one ended up with a strong enforcement record.
In fact, despite rhetoric that sometimes
almost kind of sounded a bit like trust-busting populism,
Donald Trump's nominees for key antitrust positions
all hewed to the traditional Chicago school point of view. In 2017 and 2018, Trump's administration
didn't open a single investigation into a monopoly, the longest dormant period in over 50 years.
But also, in fair and balancednessfulness, the actual antitrust enforcement record
from the second half of the Trump years
sure looks a lot like the same period under Obama.
Back in 2013, the Obama administration
threatened to block a mega merger
between American Airlines and US Airways,
arguing that increased consolidation between airlines
was already hurting passengers,
leading to increased fares, new fees on travelers,
and downgraded amenities.
A government study had also concluded
that the airlines could survive on their own,
as US Airways reported record profits in 2012.
But following an intense lobbying campaign
by the airline industry,
spearheaded by former White House Chief of Staff,
Rahm Emanuel, Obama's DOJ backed down.
And what do you know?
Post-merger, American Airlines raised fares
and eliminated a popular discount program.
All in all, the Obama administration
approved three airline mergers.
And today, four companies control up to 80% of the market.
That's bad.
Unthanks Obama.
As a response to things obviously getting
a whole lot worse quickly over the last few years,
some of the attitudes among professors
and economics experts are actually starting to shift.
A group of scholars known as the New Brandeis School,
after famed progressive era reformer
and Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis,
has emerged pushing for a more aggressively anti-monopoly agenda
and questioning the wisdom of the approach
that has brought us to this point.
So now at least we can start to acknowledge
basic economic arguments that have been understood
in principle for centuries.
Less competition means less innovation,
less investment in research and development
and fewer new productions.
Also, Bitcoin is definitely going to go up forever.
When US companies grow too large,
they have the power to artificially keep wages low
and prices high.
Most Americans now have a choice
between just one or two internet providers.
Two hospital systems exclusively control
a huge number of major markets.
Home Depot and Lowe's are the only two options
in a lot of communities where you absolutely need
to buy a plank of wood to demonstrate
that you are a big strong man.
Regional pharmacy chains have virtually disappeared
and I could keep going.
You know I could.
You know deep in your gut and or genitals
that this is a problem that no one is really addressing.
If a company knows they're
the customer's only option, why the heck would they try to improve their business? Why would
Amazon, for example, really feel the need to treat their employees better, or work to accommodate
smaller vendors, or give us more seasons of Bosh? Seven isn't enough, you fucks! I need forever Bosh!
Enough you fucks, I need forever Bosch. Except, hey, good news.
Maybe someone is finally going to address this.
And in a plot twist that rivals anything
the WB could put out, that person might be,
ba-ba-bum, Joe Biden?
Huh, well, I guess we'll have to tell you about that
after some ads, which is short for additional messages from companies paying us for advertising space.
Okay, don't forget to lick.
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Listen here. Not all Sebe Day is equal.
One time I tried some truck stop Sebe Day and nothing happened.
And then the next day, I took some more and I lost an entire week.
Woke up in a cabin sleeping on a bunch of photographs of the Unabomber.
In a lot of ways, I never left that cabin and now I work exclusively from it.
What's my point again? Oh right, Sebe Day from NextEvo Naturals.
They developed something called SmartSorb technology,
which according to them, is clinically proven to help your body absorb Sebe Day
four times better than regular Sebe Day.
That way, you always know what you're getting and that it will work.
And boy does it.
I took some of that last night and I slept like a little baby Nestled on photos of the Unabomber
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Forget the many, many owls and relax for once.
You earned it.
Okay, gross.
We're back.
Gross.
It's time for good news now, though, as I promised.
Remember that new line of thinking I mentioned,
the one that pushed a stronger anti-monopoly agenda?
Well, it seems the Biden administration actually,
maybe, possibly, might be roughly aligned
with this new line of thinking
and has added a few aggressive antitrust crusaders
in high ranking positions.
A while back, we mentioned Jonathan Cantor,
who currently leads the DOJ's antitrust
division. He spent years in the private sector fighting tech giants, like the company formerly
known as Facebook. Not sure what it's called now. We'll not be looking it up. But you know,
they're the ones who are working on that cutting edge virtual reality something-verse software
that just figured out human beings have legs. Those guys. Tim Wu, a longtime proponent of breaking up
that very same cartoon leg conglomerate,
served as a special assistant to the president
on technology and competition policy
before returning to his post at Columbia Law School
earlier this year.
The new FTC chair, Lena Kahn,
personally helped to reframe the academic debate
over antitrust legislation.
In early 2017,
while she was still a student, she published a paper called Amazon's Antitrust Paradox in the Yale Law Journal that made the case against the Chicago School, presenting Amazon
as a prime example of a company that had continued to offer low prices, but nevertheless exerts
monopolistic power over entire sectors of the U.S. economy.
Amazon, Kahn argued, can afford to forego profits in order to aggressively collect consumer data,
which it then exploits against its rivals. Along with Amazon's advantages in shipping and warehouse
infrastructure, this gives the company a level of power that you just can't summarize by looking at
basic metrics like market share.
Even companies that are direct rivals to Amazon
in some sectors have no choice
but to collaborate with them in order to survive.
Kahn's paper was the academic equivalent
of a best-selling airport read.
It's the terminal list of economic papers
in that there's no way Chris Pratt
actually got through the whole thing,
but he'll pretend he did
if you ask him about it.
And it helped to inspire a new train of thought
from Chicago school critics who became
the new Brandeis school, presumably because money train
was already taken.
There are also a few small signs that we may have
some actual consensus building around some of these issues.
Again, very small signs,
at least regarding big technology companies
who thankfully have made powerful enemies
across the entire American political map.
Two top members of the House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee,
Democratic Chairman David Cicilline
and Republican ranking member Ken Buck
actually seem to agree that bipartisan reforms
to break up technology companies are needed.
They're not totally aligned on how to actually get it done,
but still, that's something.
Start.
In fact, according to researchers
at George Mason University,
antitrust policy has undergone more significant changes
during the first year of President Biden's administration than in the most recent five decades combined.
In January of this year,
Bloomberg Law reported that Biden's FTC,
in a break with recent tradition,
has started scrutinizing mergers
between private equity and venture capital firms.
Typically, these investigations would focus exclusively
on conflicts of interest created by the deal, like an overlap in business interests among the companies in which the funds are invested. impact non-compete agreements or employee plans for unionization, executive compensation,
and other activities that might lead to anti-competitive behavior down the road.
Or just take the publishing industry, where the Big Five release 80% of all trade books in the US.
Biden's DOJ sued to prevent two of those companies, Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster,
from further consolidating. Penguin Random House, which & Schuster, from further consolidating.
Penguin Random House, which you'll note is already the names of two different companies just awkwardly mashed together, controls 25% of the U.S. publishing market share all on its own
as of 2020, the largest chunk of any single company. The deal started moving forward in 2020
with the assumption that Trump's business-friendly administration
wouldn't challenge it.
And we know that's what the principals involved
thought at the time
because Simon & Schuster CEO Jonathan Karp
said so in an email to author John Irving,
writing, quote,
I'm pretty sure the Department of Justice
wouldn't allow Penguin Random House to buy us,
but that's assuming we still have a Department of Justice.
Ah, sick joke.
Authoritarianism, am I right, folks?
Take my freedoms, please.
But in a really helpful example
of how different regulators
can actually make a real world difference,
one that's so stark,
it's almost like they knew some guy would come along
in a few years and make a comical little video essay about it,
Biden's Department of Justice actually did follow through
arguing that the deal would harm authors,
particularly those of top selling books.
The Justice Department estimates
that a combined Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster
would control 49% of the most anticipated best sellers.
So the government argued in this case
that the new company would be a monopoly,
an unfair buyer's market that will drive down prices
for the authors writing the books.
Ultimately, the deal was struck down in court.
It's dead, deader than an industry being swallowed by Amazon.
Of course, even with the Biden administration's
actual attempts and successes to do the right thing,
these executive orders, appointments,
and enforcement actions on their own can only go so far.
Congress could actually make new laws
to grant regulators more actual powers
if they weren't completely overwhelmed right now
battling the woke invasion in our schools, of course.
Gah, important stuff.
Our major antitrust laws were written more than a century
ago, so they just don't take into account a lot of modern aspects of doing business,
like say the internet or global shipping or not having to crank up your electronic devices to
make them start. Even our current regulators work was held up for nearly a year while they
waited for politicians to get around to approving Biden's nominations.
Amazon's $8.5 billion takeover of MGM,
the company's second largest acquisition in history
behind its 2017 purchase of Whole Foods,
was under fire from anti-monopoly groups,
but the regulatory period straight up expired
while the FTC was stuck in a two to two partisan deadlock.
Sorry, James Bond, you're going on adventures
with Mrs. Maisel now.
Nothing to be done about that.
The Marvelous Mr. Bond.
Both the Senate and House antitrust subcommittees
have considered, and in some cases,
even approved several bills that would help move
the regulatory ball forward.
But they're all
either stalled out or waiting to be added to the legislative calendar. The bipartisan Competition
and Transparency in Digital Advertising Act would force Google to break up its ad business and
actually counts professional internet meme and part-time Senator Ted Cruz among its sponsors.
It's been referred to the main Senate Judiciary Committee, but hasn't yet received a vote.
The Senate Judiciary Committee voted
to advance the American Innovation and Choice Online Act
back in January, which would prohibit big tech platforms
like Amazon, Apple, and Google from discriminating
against other businesses that rely on their services.
But it hasn't yet come up for a full vote.
The Open App Markets Act was approved
by the Judiciary Committee
and has actually made it
onto the Senate's legislative calendar,
but hasn't really moved forward at all since March.
This bill bars app marketplaces
from requiring developers
to use their preferred payment system
or forcing them to offer a consistent price point
across all other sales platforms.
And in October, the House passed a package
of three bipartisan antitrust bills by a 242 to 184 vote.
That includes the Merger Filing Fee Modernization Act,
which forces companies to foot more of the bill
for these expansive government investigations
into whether or not they're going to screw us over.
There's also the Foreign Merger Subsidy Disclosure Act,
which requires merging companies to disclose any support
they're currently getting from foreign governments.
And the State Antitrust Enforcement Venue Act,
which removes barriers to states
when enforcing federal antitrust laws.
These all sound like pretty good ideas,
and theoretically, the Senate could take them up
and pass them at any time.
So good luck with that.
We'll wait right here.
In the meantime, other positive steps can still be taken
like Biden's executive order from July, 2021,
which encouraged federal agencies
to take a variety of actions on behalf of consumers,
from cracking down on high ocean shipping fees to allowing hearing aids to be sold over the counter.
Still, Congress does put a natural limit on how far Brandon can really go, even in dark mode.
As with just about everything else, the solution is about chipping away at the problem piece by piece,
rather than decimating it entirely with one punch.
That's everything from you and I
choosing which businesses to support
to lawmakers making incremental progress.
It's not Godzilla distributed by Warner Brothers
taking on this tower of industry.
No, it's actually a bunch of cute little tinier Godzillas
gradually working on the foundations,
gunking up the gears, hiding in the salad bar, turning into a bat and attacking a man on the street,
hiding in a cooking pot,
and then bursting out on a lady during a cooking show,
all fucking covered in noodles and shit.
See, because while this problem spans so many industries
and can often seem abstract,
that's why we wanted to focus on this 1WB merger,
because it's a very clear example of how the corporate world
when given too much power can make our lives worse.
Art is probably the most clear antithesis of business,
representing human behavior,
the surreal and intangible and beautiful,
and therefore the factor that companies like Amazon
and Disney and Warner Brothers can't understand.
It's why they make endless sequels,
suppress directors and writers' visions,
and glom onto the superficial factors of a film's success.
A film like Gremlins, whose sequel can be summed up
in a single quote from a single scene.
You know, when art and business join forces,
anything can happen.
That line is not being said by the artist in the scene,
but the businesswoman trying to take advantage of the artist.
And that is ultimately the thesis of Gremlins 2,
an American classic.
That much like combining water and mogwai,
combining business and art most often will result in a cheapened and hollow product,
doomed to fall apart, at least eventually, to the disappointment of fans.
The same way Gizmo is bullied by the resulting gremlins,
art is tortured by the greed of these companies.
The same way any product becomes marginalized when provided by a company so big
that it doesn't need to respect its customers.
And this is where I tell you that they are in fact,
working on a third Gremlins film,
a soft reboot or sequel of course,
that according to the lead actor will quote,
"'Undo the Gremlins 2 thing.'"
He added that Warner Brothers definitely wants it
because of course they do.
And so instead of getting the message,
the business ghouls looked at their property
and figured they could squeeze
some more nostalgia bucks from it.
It's funny, I look at him, you know what I see?
What's that, sir?
Dolls with suction cups staring out car windows.
A big float in the Macy's Day Parade.
Has anybody ever talked to you about merchandising?
Because when art and business join forces,
not everything can happen.
Just one specific thing happens,
which is that the art gets fucked.
Anyway, my point here is that we see,
with Warner Brothers specifically,
what happens when corporations get their say.
So maybe we should work on changing the balance of power.
And like, I don't know,
let's skip this third Gremlins film when it comes out.
I mean, unless it looks good.
It could be good, I guess, actually.
Now that we're talking about it,
I'm getting pretty excited about it.
I wonder if they'll get Hulk Hogan back.
He'll like, he'll fuck Gizmo's wife on camera.
And then the shop owner will, he'll sue
whoever released the video.
It's a reference to a video we did recently.
Anyway, Gremlins.
And Gremlins 2.
Thanks for watching this video.
Make sure to like this video
and subscribe to the channel the video was posted to.
Also, we've got a patreon.com slash some more news,
early release of videos, no ads in those.
If you hate those, pesky ads and other stuff.
And also we've got merch at stores in the description,
just one store in the description with stuff on it.
Cute little guys,
not like mogwai cute,
more like demon puppet cute,
but still cute.
Anyway,
we got a podcast called even more news and this show as a podcast.
If you prefer that way of consuming this show.
And I'm going to sort of like power down.
I'm going to lose some steam.
There's nothing else to say about this.
Like and subscribe, do all that kind of stuff.
So I'm just going to sort of trail off and then maybe.
do all that kind of stuff so i'm just going to sort of trail off and then maybe