If you've spent the last week watching people panic—rightly, wrongly, or just recreationally—about media consolidation, you're not alone. Everyone from President Donald Trump to the janitor at Netflix to the Kalshi gu y is waiting with bated breath to find out what is going to happen next in the media industry. Regulators and unions are hovering over the deathbed of legacy media, ready to pick the corpse clean—or go full Mary Shelley on the parts.

Meanwhile, political pressure over media consolidation doesn't just change logos or how many streaming charges show up on your credit card statement. It changes incentives. It squeezes editors, narrows the range of permissible weirdness, and creates homogeneity—often right when audiences most need honest reporting and argument that isn't filtere

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