NIVA head proposes breakup, divestitures after Live Nation verdict

Stephen Parker, head of the National Independent Venue Association, urged structural remedies including a full Live Nation-Ticketmaster breakup following the April jury verdict finding the companies liable for monopolization and unlawful tying. He argued past behavioral fixes failed and called for promotion caps, artist management divestitures, and a long-term firewall.

A federal jury in Manhattan ruled against Live Nation and Ticketmaster on April 15 after a six-week antitrust trial, finding them liable for monopolizing primary ticketing at major venues, amphitheaters, and tying promotion services to venues and ticketing. Live Nation plans to appeal.

In an op-ed published May 1, Stephen Parker, executive director of the National Independent Venue Association (NIVA), outlined aggressive structural remedies for the ongoing remedies phase before Judge Arun Subramanian. Parker, representing independent venues, promoters, and festivals, dismissed monetary damages—like the jury's $1.72 per-ticket overcharge finding—as insufficient to restore competition.

He proposed: 1) Separating Ticketmaster from Live Nation; 2) Capping Live Nation promotion at 50% of any artist's tour; 3) Divesting artist management businesses; 4) A 15-year 'commercial firewall' to block reconsolidation.

Parker highlighted repeated violations of the ineffective 2010 DOJ consent decree from the Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger. He cited testimony from John Abbamondi, former CEO of Barclays Center's operator, who described pressure from Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino after threatening to switch from Ticketmaster—illustrating how tour control locks in venues.

These steps, Parker argued, would enable artists to independently select managers, promoters, and venues, fostering competition. The remedies phase continues amid Live Nation's appeal plans.

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LIV Golf CEO Scott O'Neil announces restructuring plans at Trump National D.C. amid PIF funding uncertainty, with Jon Rahm in attendance.
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State attorneys general have asked a federal judge to order Live Nation to sell off Ticketmaster following a recent jury verdict. The proposal came one month after the live music company was found to have operated as an illegal monopoly.

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A federal jury ruled on Wednesday that Live Nation and its Ticketmaster unit operated as a monopoly in the live entertainment industry. The verdict marks a major win for the Department of Justice and nearly 40 states in their antitrust case originally filed in 2024. Remedies, including possible divestitures, await a judge's decision.

The National Music Publishers’ Association has reached landmark AI licensing agreements with music firms Udio and KLAY. NMPA president and CEO David Israelite announced the deals at the group’s annual meeting on June 10. The pacts are described as the first industry-wide licensing arrangements for publisher members.

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Music Venue Trust has launched the 'Set The Record Straight' campaign targeting PRS For Music over unfair and opaque licensing fees for UK grassroots venues. The initiative highlights over £666,000 in billing discrepancies and unclaimed royalties. Venues and artists report crippling bills and systemic issues in fee calculations.

M.I.A. filed a lawsuit against Kid Cudi seeking more than $2.8 million after her removal from the Rebel Rangers Tour. The complaint was filed on May 29 in federal court in California. It alleges breach of contract and interference following remarks she made onstage in Dallas.

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A parliamentary committee has urged the government to address post-Brexit obstacles facing British performers touring Europe. The report, released on 15 June, highlights financial losses and calls for renewed cooperation with the EU.

 

 

 

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