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THE LATEST ARTICLES
NEWSLETTERS
Sam Bankman-Fried
HOLLYWOOD December 26, 2022
Bar heavies and white shoe litigators weigh in with their most provocative legal predictions for 2023: on the future of Hollywood M&A, Murdoch’s defamation headache, Trump’s obstruction jeopardy, and more.
Elon Musk
SILICON VALLEY December 19, 2022
The explosion of litigation stemming from Musk’s rampage at Twitter—mass firings, gag orders, jilted shareholders and vendors—threatens to expedite the company’s astounding downfall into the hands of its creditors. Too bad he’s fired so many lawyers.
Lina M. Khan
SILICON VALLEY December 12, 2022
Microsoft’s $69 billion Activision deal may be defensible from an antitrust perspective. But Biden’s F.T.C. has an overwhelming advantage: time.
New York Knicks owner James Dolan.
HOLLYWOOD December 5, 2022
The Knicks and Rangers owner has long been considered one of the worst, and least effective, owners in sports. Does he care? Now he’s added technology at MSG to facially identify lawyers suing his company.


Taylor Swift
HOLLYWOOD November 21, 2022
The “Eras Tour” imbroglio doesn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know about the notorious ticketing company, but it’s cause to revisit the idea of suits versus artists. Ticketmaster, after all, functions as an agent for artists. Shouldn’t they shoulder some of the responsibility?
S.B.F.
WALL STREET November 14, 2022
FTX anticipated getting hit with an avalanche of lawsuits and likely filed for Chapter 11 early to pause the mayhem. This peace of mind will only last so long.
Apple C.E.O. Tim Cook.
SILICON VALLEY November 7, 2022
A multi-billion dollar suit over Apple’s “internet tax” could affect everything from the survival of Elon Musk’s Twitter to the geopolitics behind TikTok.
Paul Newman with his wife, actress Joanne Woodward.
HOLLYWOOD October 24, 2022
The late Hollywood heartthrob turned salad-dressing entrepreneur left behind a billion-dollar food empire and very, very specific instructions for his estate. But even the best laid plans can go awry when there’s money on the line.


S.E.C. Chair Gary Gensler.
WALL STREET October 17, 2022
It’s shareholder proxy season—the time when aggrieved investors can put the screws to the world’s biggest companies over issues large and small, including their commitment to E.S.G. It’s a season that’s becoming ever more politically and legally explosive.
bill murray
HOLLYWOOD October 10, 2022
Getting to the bottom of the behavior that turned Aziz Ansari’s ‘Being Mortal’ into a case study of Hollywood legal mores in the #MeToo era.
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