'Big Win for the Public': The Awful
Tribune-Sinclair Merger Is Dead
In
a huge win for everyone concerned about the devastating effects corporate
consolidation has on local media outlets and independent journalism, Tribune
Media announced on Thursday that it is
terminating its proposed $3.9 billion merger with Sinclair Broadcast Group and
suing the right-wing media giant for "breach of contract."
"The
collapse of this merger is as major a victory for American consumers as it is a
defeat for the propaganda pushers at Sinclair," Karl Frisch, executive
director of Allied Progress, said in a statement responding to news of the merger's
death.
"Dozens of communities will now be spared from nightly force-feedings of content advancing the fringe political agenda of the media behemoth's owners."
"Dozens of communities will now be spared from nightly force-feedings of content advancing the fringe political agenda of the media behemoth's owners."
Craig
Aaron, president and CEO of Free Press, attributed the collapse of the
"terrible" merger—which was strongly supported by President Donald
Trump, for obvious reasons—to "everyone who
mobilized, organized, and spoke out against it."
"You
did it!" Aaron declared on Twitter. "Thanks to the reporters who
stayed on the story. Thank you FCC for taking your job seriously. The end of
this merger is a big win for the public!"
As Common Dreams reported, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chair Ajit Pai last month expressed "serious concerns" about the proposed merger, which would have spawned a corporate media monstrosity capable of delivering pro-Trump propaganda to an estimated 70 percent of American households.
"That
would have been extremely dangerous to our increasingly fragile
democracy," Frisch of Allied Progress said on Thursday. "The
leadership at Sinclair has expressed a desire to see a future where local
television news stations are controlled by one or two companies."
While
Frisch notes that this "is less likely to happen with today's
announcement," he urged Americans to "remain vigilant."
"Sinclair
isn't likely to learn the right lessons from the collapse of this merger,"
Frisch concluded. "They will be back."