Illustration: Melanie Lambrick

The Heartland Billionaire Destroying the Working Class

Joe Ricketts’ memoir tells of making it on his own—while crushing unions, scamming customers, and undermining local media

David Klion
GEN
Published in
14 min readNov 5, 2019

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InIn a recent episode of HBO’s Succession, Kendall Roy, heir to a vast media fortune, personally lays off the entire staff of the fictional website Vaulter: a digital media mashup of BuzzFeed, Gawker, Vox, and Vice. With Kendall’s brief announcement, a few hundred millennial journalists are suddenly without work, all so that Waystar Royco, Vaulter’s parent company, can both trim a bit of fat and smother a potential union.

If you happened to be on Twitter while the episode aired, you probably heard about this scene, because it was painfully familiar to nearly every journalist on the platform. In the past several years, all of us have seen friends lose jobs as sites shutter, restructure, or “pivot to video,” often in retaliation for a union drive. Again and again, sites that provide unquantifiable value to real audiences are being cannibalized and resold by billionaires or private equity groups who don’t understand what journalism is, hold journalists in contempt, and eagerly ruin journalistic careers out of sheer petty malice. The only thing about Vaulter’s demise that felt even slightly unrealistic is that the executive had the…

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David Klion
GEN
Writer for

David Klion is News Editor for Jewish Currents and a writer for the Nation, the New Republic, and other publications.