In 1948, the Supreme Court ruled that five studios had monopolized the American film industry. Paramount, Warner Bros., MGM, RKO, and Fox owned the theaters that showed their own movies.
The court ordered them to sell.
For the next 72 years, the Paramount Consent Decrees kept the studios apart.
In August 2020, a federal judge terminated the decrees. The reasoning was that the market had changed beyond recognition.
Streaming had replaced theaters as the primary distribution channel. The studios were no longer dangerous monopolists. They were struggling incumbents.
Six years later, Paramount and Warner Bros. are merging. The deal is worth $111 billion including debt. The Justice Department approved it on June 12, 2026.
Two of the five studios that the Supreme Court forced apart are coming back together voluntarily. Not because they are too powerful, but because they are too weak to survive alone.
It’s a familiar story. Regulation is often designed to solve a specific market structure problem (monopoly power, natural monopoly characteristics, or high barriers to entry).
Over time, technology, globalization, new business models, and substitute products can eliminate the original source of market power. Regulations that once made sense may then become unnecessary, counterproductive, or even protective of incumbents.
Industry | Original Monopoly Concern | Regulatory Response | What Changed? | Why Regulation Became Less Necessary |
Railroads (1880s) | Railroads often held local transportation monopolies | Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 and creation of the ICC | Trucks, highways, pipelines, barges, airlines emerged | Railroads lost their transportation monopoly and faced extensive intermodal competition. The ICC was ultimately abolished in 1996. (PBS) |
Airlines (1938–1978) | Fear that airlines would become monopolies and require centralized route and fare control | Civil Aeronautics Board regulated routes, prices, and entry | Industry matured; economists found regulation often restricted competition rather than promoting it | Congress passed the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, eliminating most economic regulation. (Congress.gov) |
Long-distance telephone service | AT&T dominance in national telephony | Rate regulation, entry restrictions, antitrust oversight | Fiber optics, microwave transmission, wireless networks, internet communications | Long-distance became highly competitive and prices collapsed. (Investopedia) |
Telephone equipment | AT&T controlled devices connected to the network | FCC restrictions and later interoperability rules | Standardized interfaces and competitive equipment markets | Consumers now freely purchase phones and network devices from many suppliers. (WIRED) |
Telegraph | Western Union's dominance | State and federal oversight of messaging services | Telephone, fax, email, messaging apps | Telegraph market essentially disappeared; monopoly concerns vanished with the technology itself. |
Trucking (mid-20th century) | Concern about destructive competition and market concentration | ICC regulation of routes and pricing | Improved logistics, highways, nationwide competition | Most economic regulation was removed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. (LegalClarity) |
Natural gas transportation | Pipeline monopolies in some regions | Extensive price and transportation regulation | Competitive gas production, spot markets, interstate trading hubs | Many pricing controls were relaxed as markets became more competitive. |
Stock trading commissions | Dominant exchanges could maintain fixed commissions | SEC oversight and fixed-rate structures | Electronic trading and competing exchanges | Fixed commissions were abolished in 1975 ("May Day"), leading to intense competition. |
Broadcast television | Scarce spectrum created limited competition | FCC ownership and content regulations | Cable TV, satellite TV, streaming services, internet video | The original scarcity rationale weakened substantially. |
Local newspapers | Dominant local print monopolies | Special antitrust accommodations and ownership rules | Internet advertising, social media, digital news | Many newspaper monopolies disappeared due to competition from digital substitutes. |
In the case of the studios, massive changes in the video and movie business make older restrictions unnecessary.
Television was an alternative to “going to the movies, and therefore a threat. But studios discovered:
TV licensing created new revenue
Old film libraries became valuable assets
Syndication emerged as a lucrative business.
The additional changes in distribution (cable TV, home video, streaming) likewise emphasized the role of content ownership and creation for studios, even as new distributors emerged to capture value.
Era | Largest Value Capture |
Theater | Studios + theaters |
Broadcast TV | Networks |
Cable TV | Cable operators |
DVD | Studios |
Streaming | Platforms |
Among the new issues with streaming is the importance of distribution versus “discovery,” as “scarcity value” migrates.
Era | Scarce Resource |
Theaters | Screens |
Broadcast TV | Spectrum |
Cable TV | Channel capacity |
DVD | Shelf space |
Streaming | Consumer attention |
Frequently, the substitute products and competitors come from “outside” an industry’s chosen domain.
Perhaps the classic example is railroads believing they were in the trains business, when they were actually in the transportation business. The substitutes did not come from inside the “railroad” business but from outside.
Product | Apparent Monopoly | Important Substitute |
Railroads | Railroads | Trucks, barges, airlines |
Long-distance calls | AT&T | Mobile, VoIP, messaging apps |
Broadcast TV | Local stations | Cable, satellite, streaming |
Newspapers | Local newspaper | Internet and social media |
Taxi medallions | Local taxis | Ride-sharing platforms |
Video rental stores | Blockbuster | Streaming services |
Each major distribution innovation created new winners, weakened existing gatekeepers, and shifted where revenue accumulated:
broadcast television
cable television
home video
DVD
streaming.
Era | Dominant Distribution | Key Gatekeeper | Main Revenue Source |
1920s–1950s | Movie theaters | Theater chains | Ticket sales |
1950s–1980s | Broadcast TV | TV networks | Advertising |
1980s–2000s | Cable TV | Cable operators | Subscription fees + advertising |
1980s–2010s | VHS/DVD | Retailers & studios | Unit sales/rentals |
2010s–present | Streaming | Streaming platforms | Subscriptions |
Emerging | AI-assisted distribution | Platforms & recommendation engines | Subscription + advertising + commerce |
The point is that “where” monopoly danger exists will shift with time. And so must the regulatory concern. Emerging industries might need one pattern. Declining industries virtually always need another: preventing concentration early; encouraging it in the industry decline phase.
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