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For those outside the publishing industry, the inner workings of the industry are wrapped in mystery.
In secretive industries, information is typically leaked through hacks, whistleblowers, and court cases. Cases involving big publishers rarely go to trial because big companies dislike having their secrets publicized.
But when one of the largest publishers in the history of publishing was taken to court by the Department of Justice, we got a rare peek behind the scenes.
Some of the best journalistic coverage of the DOJ v. PRH case came from Jane Friedman’s Hot Sheet newsletter, and in this week’s episode, I interviewed Jane Friedman about the trial and what we learned.
You’ll find out
Listen in or check out the blog post for insight into traditional publishing secrets, challenges, and methods.
Support the show
By Thomas Umstattd Jr.4.8
325325 ratings
For those outside the publishing industry, the inner workings of the industry are wrapped in mystery.
In secretive industries, information is typically leaked through hacks, whistleblowers, and court cases. Cases involving big publishers rarely go to trial because big companies dislike having their secrets publicized.
But when one of the largest publishers in the history of publishing was taken to court by the Department of Justice, we got a rare peek behind the scenes.
Some of the best journalistic coverage of the DOJ v. PRH case came from Jane Friedman’s Hot Sheet newsletter, and in this week’s episode, I interviewed Jane Friedman about the trial and what we learned.
You’ll find out
Listen in or check out the blog post for insight into traditional publishing secrets, challenges, and methods.
Support the show

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