 Why would anyone want to buy a media company? I was wondering this, once again, upon learning this week that LinkedIn discussed a potential acquisition of Beehiiv, the newsletter platform that is increasingly trying to be the payment and distribution hub for modern media companies and independent creators. Neither company responded to a request for comment, but it seems LinkedIn may have been looking to bolster the tech behind its growing newsletter arm. The conversations also serve as an acknowledgement of the continued dominance of newsletters among the professional class, or at least among consumers who still get their news by reading. Much of the rest of recent news media M&A has been less about business and profit than reputational clout and messaging. That was certainly the driving force behind OpenAI’s stunning acquisition last week of the AI-focused streaming show TBPN for something in the “low hundreds of millions.” The AI giant asserted its dominance by buying up the industry’s favorite insider media property. One big open question: Who’s going to buy Beehiiv’s bigger, more mature rival, Substack? Also today: Other types of influence-seeking are driving media acquisitions — like in Baltimore, where the 2024 sale of the city’s flagship paper to a conservative media baron is shaping local and national politics. |