『Ep. 7 | Investigating the Missing Live Nation Legal Report』のカバーアート

Ep. 7 | Investigating the Missing Live Nation Legal Report

Ep. 7 | Investigating the Missing Live Nation Legal Report

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概要

With just one week until the landmark USA vs. Live Nation antitrust trial begins, the concert giant files an emergency interlocutory appeal seeking to delay proceedings indefinitely. Touring expert Dave Brooks and lawyer Michael Seville break down Live Nation's desperate legal maneuvers, analyze why the company mysteriously pulled a controversial blog post from their VP, and predict how the judge will rule on key pre-trial motions.

EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS:

What is an Interlocutory Appeal?

  • Mike explains this mid-case legal mechanism that allows defendants to pause trials for emergency appeals

  • Key quote: "You essentially have to prove that allowing the case to move forward would cause irreparable harm to the moving party"

Live Nation's Market Definition Strategy

  • Discussion of how Live Nation is challenging the government's market definitions using the FTC v. Meta precedent

  • Key quote: "What they're trying to do is highlight what they term as conflicting decisions by judges"

The Bifurcation Motion Explained

  • Analysis of Live Nation's attempt to split federal and state claims into separate trials

  • Key quote: "Live Nation's biggest fear is the nuclear option... breaking up large monopolies"

The Mysterious Dan Wall Blog Incident

  • Deep dive into why Live Nation pulled their VP's victory lap blog post after one day

  • Key quote: "Most judges do not like parties making comments about cases that are ongoing"

Motions in Limine Game

  • Interactive segment testing Mike's ability to predict judicial rulings on pre-trial evidence motions

  • Key quote: "Motions in limine are very delicate and important... they can really shape what one side or the other is able to get in front of the jury"

RESOURCES MENTIONED:

  • FTC v. Meta case: Precedent case involving social media market definitions that Live Nation is citing

  • USA v. Live Nation case documents: Federal antitrust lawsuit against the concert giant

  • Live Nation consent decree: 2010 and 2019 agreements with DOJ regarding merger conditions

  • Dan Wall's pulled blog post: "It's Time to Move On" - Live Nation VP's controversial settlement plea

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  1. Live Nation is using every legal tool available to delay or dismiss the antitrust trial, including rare interlocutory appeals

  2. The company's public relations missteps, like the pulled blog post, reveal internal tensions about legal strategy

  3. Pre-trial motions in limine significantly shape what evidence juries will see, making them crucial to trial outcomes

  4. Both sides may be more positioned for settlement negotiations after the mixed summary judgment ruling

Key QUOTES:

  • "You ask two lawyers a legal question, you get five different answers. That's the beauty of the law." - Michael Seville

  • "Live Nation chose not to take the win and filed what's kind of like an emergency appeal to the Second Circuit." - Michael Seville

  • "What fan is out there just saying Live Nation is just awesome? They're angels?" - Michael Seville


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