What Will It Take To Defeat Ticketmaster?
Would breaking up the Live Nation monopoly really improve an inequitable music industry?
Explore all of The Lever’s reporting that holds the powerful accountable.
Would breaking up the Live Nation monopoly really improve an inequitable music industry?
In their new book The Wolves of K Street, Brody and Luke Mullins explore how corporate power came to dominate American politics.
A Koch-owned company is exploiting bankruptcy law to avoid responsibility for their asbestos assets and rewrite judicial precedent.
Amid accountability lawsuits and mounting public outcry, a prominent climate expert on ExxonMobil’s board is throwing in the towel.
Military contractors are scamming the government and shooting down accountability efforts, and other news from The Lever this week.
Plus, Big Oil gets hit for deceptive practices, environmental cleanup sites will become community hubs, and Minnesota shuts down prison gerrymandering.
This week on Lever Time, a former Capital One employee gives us an inside look at the company’s manipulative tactics to keep you in debt.
Companies are exploiting the First Amendment to undermine rules that protect consumers and deter corruption.
After donating millions to key lawmakers, military contractors scored two provisions in an upcoming Pentagon funding bill allowing them to continue overcharging the government.
The country’s top weapons manufacturers rejected shareholder motions to expose their emissions policies and human rights practices.