From Antitrust ALERT <[email protected]>
Subject This merger is a threat to democracy
Date August 13, 2022 1:12 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Hi,

If Penguin Random House gets its way, it will soon own Simon &
Schuster—leaving only four major publishers in an industry that once had
dozens.^1

In a country built on free press, where Common Sense helped launch the
Revolutionary War and The Grapes of Wrath encouraged a New Deal, the idea
of just four white CEOs deciding what books reach the shelves is nothing
less than alarming.

There’s more than one way to ban a book: Publishing monopolies keep
diverse and controversial voices out of the hands of readers. The Justice
Department is trying to shut down the Penguin Random House merger, and we
need the Federal Trade Commission to get involved as well.

[ [link removed] ]Will you donate to Demand Progress and help drive our anti-monopoly
work?

If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your
donation will go through immediately:

[ [link removed] ]Donate $10

[ [link removed] ]Donate $20

[ [link removed] ]Donate $40

[ [link removed] ]Or, donate another amount

Twenty years ago, there were many publishing companies that competed for
shelf space. But then Simon & Schuster was acquired by CBS’s parent
company, which also began gobbling up other presses. Random House’s owner
began to do the same, merging with Penguin, Houghton Mifflin, and
Doubleday.^2

As publishing houses grew, the chances for new authors to break through
shrank. Giant corporations trying to grow their stock value weren’t
willing to take chances on unknown or controversial books, and worse, as
competition lessened, they had less incentive to pay living wages to
authors.^3

Publishing has also become less diverse as the number of houses dwindles.
Currently, an unacceptable 76% of people working for publishing companies
are white—and just 1 in 10 books published is by a person of color.^4
Letting just four corporations control the publishing industry will do
nothing to improve that number.

The Justice Department’s star witness was blockbuster author Stephen King,
who has spoken out strongly against creating the megacorporation—despite
being published by Simon & Schuster.^5 As King says, the fewer publishing
companies we have, the fewer books we will have. And fewer books is never
good for democracy.

We need the FTC to leverage anti-monopoly laws to shut down this terrible
merger. Will you chip in?

[ [link removed] ]Yes, I’ll donate to Demand Progress and help drive anti-monopoly work.

With gratitude for all you do,

Tihi and the team at Demand Progress Action

[ [link removed] ]DONATE

Sources:
1. USA Today, "Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster merger trial:
Everything that has happened so far," [ [link removed] ]August 7, 2022.
2. Publishers Weekly, "Over the Past 25 Years, the Big Publishers Got
Bigger—and Fewer," [ [link removed] ]April 19, 2022.
3. Vulture, "The Biggest Plot Twists in the Simon & Schuster Antitrust
Trial," [ [link removed] ]August 10, 2022.
4. The New York Times, "Just How White Is the Book Industry?,"
[ [link removed] ]December 11, 2020.
5. USA Today, "Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster merger trial:
Everything that has happened so far," [ [link removed] ]August 7, 2022.
----------

PAID FOR BY DEMAND PROGRESS (<a href="[link removed]">DemandProgress.org</a>) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee. Contributions are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes. Join our online community on <b><a href="[link removed]">Facebook</a></b> or <b><a href="[link removed]">Twitter</a>.</b>

You can unsubscribe from this list at any time: [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis