People are always finding new ways to listen to music, from vinyls and cassettes to stolen downloads and paid streaming services. So, how is the music business holding up? Who’s making the money today? And what's in store for musicians with the growth of artificial intelligence? On this episode of our podcast, On the Merits, Bloomberg Law’s Roy Strom dives into those questions and more with Sid Fohrman, chair of the music industry practice at Paul Hastings. The Los Angeles lawyer, who joined the...
Feb 04, 2025•20 min
Big Law has long feared that the Big Four accounting firms–Deloitte, PWC, KPMG, and EY–would start practicing law in the US. Now, that may soon be a reality. Big law's fear is that the Big Four has scale that dwarfs even the largest US law firms, and its dominance in legal technology could lead to a paradigm shift in how legal services are delivered. But American lawyers have always had a safety net. The ethical rules for lawyers say that non-lawyers can’t own law firms. This has put a fence aro...
Jan 30, 2025•17 min
When Russian chemicals magnate Oleg Burlakov died of Covid, he left behind a $3 billion fortune that prompted an international legal battle among feuding members of his family. In one corner stand his sister and brother-in-law, who say they had a secret agreement with Burlakov entitling them to half of what he left behind. In the other: His estranged widow and adult daughters. Their fight over Burlakov’s billions has led to litigation in London, Moscow, Monaco, and Miami. Now, the Miami case—bef...
Jan 28, 2025•19 min
Donald Trump’s presidential election had market commenters rushing to conclude that the new administration would yield a flood of corporate dealmaking. But the widely anticipated Trump Bump for deals is already facing hurdles. Interest rates have steadily risen as the fear of inflation remains. Markets are buffeted by every piece of news about potential tariffs. And stock prices have faltered from their initial post-election surge. With Trump now in the White House, has the optimism for a dealma...
Jan 21, 2025•17 min
Today on 'On the Merits,' we revisit our March 2024 episode that explores California's ongoing battle to keep homeowners insured amidst the persistent threat of wildfires.
Jan 16, 2025•18 min
Big Law associates often feel they have little control over their pay or their time. But Steptoe & Johnson's new compensation model will allow associates to choose a 1800-, 2000-, or 2200-billable-hour track with a corresponding pay scale. On this episode of On the Merits, Kate Reder Sheikh, partner at Major, Lindsey & Africa, shares how a tiered compensation plan could benefit both associates and law firms—and what the risks are. She also gives the latest industry updates on return-to-o...
Jan 14, 2025•14 min
Elon Musk's six-year saga defending his $56 billion Tesla Inc. pay package in the Delaware Chancery Court has captivated the state's tight-knit legal community and the wider world of Musk watchers, including his more than 200 million online followers. In January 2024, the court's chief judge struck down the pay package, prompting a months-long social media barrage—and a host of novel legal stunts—from the tech titan. In December, the judge rejected the compensation deal again, handing $345 milli...
Jan 10, 2025•26 min
The year 2024 saw tons of firms looking for merger opportunities and the lightning-fast growth that they provided. Although there's still plenty of room for new mergers, the legal industry is constantly looking for other ways to be competitive as big companies like KPMG are looking to enter the legal services market. This edition of On the Merits was hosted for the first time by Tom Taylor, chief of staff of the newsroom. Reporters Meghan Tribe and Justin Henry, who cover the business of law, an...
Jan 07, 2025•18 min
New attorneys often leave law school with a lot of ideas about how the legal system works, but they typically don’t know much about the business of being a lawyer. How do law firms make money? How do they govern themselves? And what trends are shaping the law firms where they will work? On this episode of On the Merits, Bloomberg Law’s Roy Strom spoke with Kevin Burke, a former chairman at Hinshaw & Culbertson who’s now teaching law students the answers to these and other questions about the...
Jan 02, 2025•12 min
It’s our final episode for the year — and it’s been a year, one that included subtle DEI language, substantial associate bonuses, and the reprise of Donald Trump. Bloomberg Law had a lot of news stories to cover this year. And on this episode of On the Merits, podcast producer Mo Barrow reviews eight of Bloomberg Law's top stories in 2024 with Editor at Large Bernie Kohn. Do you have feedback on this episode of On The Merits? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690
Dec 24, 2024•9 min
Lawyers have demanding careers with late hours and weekend work, for which many of them are handsomely compensated. So it may be surprising to learn that a growing number of attorneys have or are looking for a side gig. A recent Bloomberg Law survey found that 1 in 5 respondents either have a side gig or want one. For attorneys, a side hustle can be a way to explore their creative side, an opportunity to meet new people and possible new clients, or build some skills for their career. Sometimes, ...
Dec 19, 2024•15 min
As the presidential transition picks up speed, a legal sector that overwhelmingly supported Kamala Harris is preparing for Donald Trump's return to the White House. A handful of Florida-based big law firms with connections to the incoming administration are hoping to leverage those Trump ties, while Democratic-leaning firms are looking to retool. At the same time, a cryptocurrency industry that spent the Biden presidency playing defense is starting to flex its muscle. The pivot includes a rare p...
Dec 17, 2024•14 min
Plenty of dealmakers expect a boom in M&A activity next year, anticipating a business-friendly Trump administration will rekindle animal spirits. That may mean private-equity firms will unload companies they've held for years. Traditionally, that means Big Law firms will have a flood of work. But it may also mean less of a certain type of complex transaction that has been occurring over the past year: Private equity companies selling pieces of businesses between themselves. On this episode o...
Dec 10, 2024•15 min
Attorneys have toiled for years in Big Law firms with the hope that one day they would make partner. The title carries prestige—and money, too. But in recent years, the promotion to partner hasn't always meant what it used to. A new class of non-equity partner is on the rise. This means these so-called partners-in-name-only don't own a share of the business and generally make a fraction of the compensation of an equity partner. For some attorneys, this arrangement is just fine, as it gives them ...
Dec 05, 2024•13 min
Today’s Big Law firms are huge businesses—the world’s biggest might surpass $8 billion in revenue this year. As the largest firms create an elite tier, more law firm leaders are choosing to achieve scale through mergers. On this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, Bloomberg Law’s Roy Strom spoke with Kent Zimmermann, a principal at law firm consultancy Zeughauser Group, about how leaders close those deals. The process includes showcasing your best attributes, setting expectations for a potent...
Dec 03, 2024•14 min
Corporate DEI measures saw a surge during and after the nationwide unrest over George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police, but they've since become a major political, legal, and cultural flashpoint. Companies that adopted diversity initiatives in 2020 and afterward are now trying to figure out how to retool as they confront a backlash that seems to be partly about weariness with bureaucratic initiatives, but also partly a reflection of demographic anxieties. On this episode of our podcast, On T...
Nov 26, 2024•17 min
Generative AI has promised to reshape the practice of law ever since ChatGPT emerged. However, it's been unclear just how large law firms are using AI. Has it changed how practitioners do their jobs on a daily basis? Are we witnessing the emergence of a revolution in how lawyers do their work? Uncommon Law's Matthew Schwartz sits in as guest host on this episode of On the Merits. He talks with John Quinn, founder and chair of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan. They discuss Quinns' firm's sta...
Nov 17, 2024•22 min
President-elect Donald Trump is poised to further shape a federal judiciary he remade during his first term. Building on his historic number of appointments, including Supreme Court justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett, Trump will likely choose nominees that are even more reliably conservative this time around. And, because of his success moving the judiciary to the right, Democrats seeking to challenge future Trump policies have fewer options for finding a receptive for...
Nov 14, 2024•18 min
Associates at Big Law firms are accustomed to a tradition: Whenever one law firm raises associate salaries or doles out a bonus, other firms scramble to match. But this year, something strange happened: A Wall Street law firm, Milbank LLP, in August gave out a special bonus, and none of its law firm competitors followed suit. Bloomberg Law’s Roy Strom spoke with his colleague Meghan Tribe about what might happen next for associates' bonuses on this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, and how ...
Nov 12, 2024•16 min
A group of antitrust lawsuits blames the nationwide affordable housing crisis in part on a conspiracy among some of the country's top landlords to drive up rent using artificial intelligence tools. The scheme allegedly works through property management software that crunches data provided by its customers—the landlords—to maximize rent. Another group of lawsuits also targeted the top hotel-casinos in Las Vegas and Atlantic City, saying they operated a parallel cartel using similar software. Two ...
Nov 05, 2024•14 min
At the New Jersey state supreme court, all of the justices seem to get along–even though they maintain a 4-3 partisan split in their ranks. The unique system, based on an unwritten rule that the governor will select justices and maintain a 4-3 balance politically, leads to an extraordinary amount of agreement among the justices. And attorneys like it, too. On this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, senior correspondent Alex Ebert talks about how the New Jersey Supreme Court maintains its sys...
Oct 31, 2024•17 min
Fighting over the meaning of contracts is expensive and time-consuming. But a University of Pennsylvania professor sees the potential of generative artificial intelligence to give judges a tool to clarify a contract. Bloomberg Law senior correspondent Roy Strom spoke with professor David Hoffman, an expert on contracts law who co-wrote a paper on what he calls “generative interpretation.” It’s a pretty simple concept: using large language models to determine what a contract really means. On this...
Oct 29, 2024•14 min
It's been almost four months since the Supreme Court's landmark ruling decision in Loper Bright that overruled the oft-cited Chevron doctrine. And now we're starting to see what administrative law is going to look like with judges more empowered to pick apart federal agencies' justifications for their actions. However, there could also be another case on the Supreme Court's docket for this term that upends the field of administrative law once again, and this one involves an arcane principle call...
Oct 22, 2024•13 min
Fortress Investment Group has powered its way to the top of the litigation funding industry. It has committed $6.6 billion to legal assets, and another $2.9 billion to intellectual property. But beyond the money, the secret to the firm's success may be its intensity and attention to detail. Bloomberg Law litigation finance reporter Emily Siegel sat down for almost three hours with two Fortress executives: Jack Neumark, managing partner and co-CIO, and Eran Zur, head of intellectual property. The...
Oct 17, 2024•15 min
Disney recently backtracked on its attempts to force arbitration on a widower who who filed a wrongful death lawsuit but, it said, had agreed to not take the company to court when he signed up for a free trial of its streaming service. This about-face, which followed a wave of bad publicity for Disney, may be the exception, not the rule, according to a law professor who specializes in arbitration. David Horton calls these agreements "infinite arbitration" clauses because they force consumers to ...
Oct 15, 2024•18 min
Vice President Kamala Harris enjoyed a huge cash infusion to her campaign shortly after it launched this summer, and one of the groups behind this influx were attorneys donating to the Democratic candidate. Attorneys gave more than $8 million to the Harris campaign in just the first 10 days of its existence, according to data analyzed by Bloomberg Law reporters Tatyana Monnay and K. Sophie Will. This is the latest example of the legal profession moving more toward the Democratic column with ever...
Oct 08, 2024•15 min
Deals activity is picking up, according to the third quarter data from Bloomberg Law's League Tables. But the looming election and more potential rate cuts from the Fed means there's uncertainty over what comes next. On this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, Bloomberg Law reporter Mahira Dayal digs into the data and talks about which firms are on top and which ones have slipped. She also talks about what impact the election could have on next quarter's report. Do you have feedback on this e...
Oct 03, 2024•11 min
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has recused himself far more often than his eight other colleagues in recent years, and that's because, unlike his colleagues, he holds a significant amount of stock in public companies. But what's more notable are the times Alito failed to recuse himself even though he had a conflict of interest. On this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, Bloomberg News reporter Emily Birnbaum talks about why, even with a new code of ethics, there are still few, if any, co...
Oct 01, 2024•17 min
Electric vehicles are far from a new phenomenon, but the sparseness of public, non-Tesla charging stations along the highway can still make taking a road trip in other types of EVs somewhat harrowing. Bloomberg Government reporters Kellie Lunney and Lillianna Byington discovered this first hand when they went on a road trip to test out the country's federally funded EV infrastructure and almost got stranded on the side of the road. On this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, Kellie and Lillia...
Sep 25, 2024•17 min
This summer, Bloomberg Law released its fourth DEI Framework, recognizing 57 US-based law firms that meet or exceed standards for diversity, equity, and inclusion. But, in the wake of the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling that ended race-conscious admission programs at colleges and universities, how are these firms managing their initiatives without facing complaints from DEI opponents like conservative activist Edward Blum? Last year, Blum, along with his team, the American Alliance for Equal Rights,...
Sep 20, 2024•15 min