The reported settlement involving Live Nation is not just a business or regulatory story—it raises serious questions about the influence of corporate power over public institutions. When one of the most dominant companies in the live entertainment industry reaches deals that shape enforcement outcomes and legal accountability, the public deserves to know whether justice is being negotiated behind closed doors rather than pursued in the open. Yet too often, coverage of corporate settlements focuses on legal procedure or market impact instead of examining the deeper issue: how powerful corporations use political influence, lobbying, and legal leverage to shape the rules meant to restrain them. When media outlets treat these outcomes as routine legal developments, they miss the larger story about regulatory capture and corporate power. We call on major news organizations to cover the Live Nation settlement as a corruption story—investigating the lobbying networks, political relationships, and enforcement decisions that allowed it to happen. The public deserves journalism that follows the money, examines who benefits, and exposes how concentrated corporate power can bend accountability to its will.