Race, Markets, and Hollywood's Perpetual Antitrust Dilemma
Michigan Journal of Race and Law
Volume 18
Issue 1
Article 1
2012
Race, Markets, and Hollywood's Perpetual Antitrust Dilemma
Hosea H. Harvey
Temple University, James E. Beasley School of Law
Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjrl
Part of the Antitrust and Trade Regulation Commons, Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons,
Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons, and the Law and Race Commons
Recommended Citation
Hosea H. Harvey, Race, Markets, and Hollywood's Perpetual Antitrust Dilemma, 18 MICH. J. RACE & L. 1
(2012).
Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjrl/vol18/iss1/1
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.
RACE, MARKETS, AND HOLLYWOOD'S PERPETUAL
ANTITRUST DILEMMA
Hosea H. Harvey*
This Article focuses on the oft-neglected intersection of racially skewed outcomes and
anti-competitive markets. Through historical, contextual, and empirical analysis, the
Article describes the state of Hollywood motion-picture distributionfrom its anticompetitive beginnings through the industry's role in creating an anti-competitive,
racially divided market at the end of the last century. The Article's evidence suggests
that race-based inefficiencies have plagued the film distribution process and such
inefficiencies might likely be caused by the anti-competitive structure of the market
itself, and not merely by overt or intentional racial-discrimination.After explaining
why traditional anti-discrimination laws are ineffective remedies for such
inefficiencies, the Article asks whether antitrust remedies and market mechanisms
mght provide more robust solutions.
INTRODUCTION...................................
2
I. FAUX-COMPETITION: A BRIEF HISTORY OF HOLLYWOOD ............. 4
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
II.
THE EMPIRICAL FOUNDATIONS OF FILM DISTRIBUTION ..............
22
.............
Previous Studies and Industry Models....
.............
..........
Applied Models and Analysis
Distributors'Defenses........................
Revisiting "Faux-Competition":Why Inequities
Might Persist...................................
22
25
30
......................
39
A.
B.
C.
D.
III.
Anti-Competitive Beginnings ........................
5
Modern Distribution Regimes.
..........
.............. 9
The "Business" and "Science" of Efficient Distribution......... 12
Majority-Minority Films..............
............ 16
Preference Externalities,Demand Metrics, and Distribution.... 19
THE ANTI-DISCRIMINATION TOOLBOX
A.
B.
C.
36
FamiliarParadigms...........................
40
TraditionalAnti-DiscriminationLaw: Not an Option .......... 42
Market-Based Solutions and Antitrust Remedies ................ 46
*
Assistant Professor of Law and Political Science, Temple University, James E.
Beasley School of Law. Ph.D. (Stanford University),J.D. (Stanford Law School). My thanks
to Janet Alexander, Lucius Barker, Devon Carbado, Marcus Cole, Aaron Edlin, Luis Fraga,
Bryant Garth, Nyree Gray, Donald Harris, David Hoffman, Pam Karlan, Greg Mandel,
Lynn Mather, Salil Mehra, and Ewart Thomas, and to audiences at the Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, UCLA School of Law, and Southwestern Law School for many helpful
comments. Special thanks to Elizabeth Bailey and Adam Gomez for excellent research
assistance.
1
2
Michiganjournal of Race & Law
[VOL. 18:1
D.
Legal Challenges:Likelihood of Success ................
E.
Alternative Solutions
.........................
CONCLUSION
.........................................
APPENDIX
............................................
48
54
55
57
INTRODUCTION
This Article examines racially skewed outcomes in an unfamiliar
context-outside of the familiar rubric of traditional anti-discrimination
regimes. Law scholars have not given adequate attention to a fairly significant problem: the fact that non-competitive markets fuel inefficient and
racially-skewed outcomes beyond labor market distortions. Economic
outcomes relating to production, creation, and distribution of goods and
services are also affected.' In these markets, where we see a form of anticompetitive racial impasse, how can we more easily determine whether
racial inequities remain, what causes them, and how the law can reduce or
eliminate them? The typical framework for analyzing such problems
might rest in antitrust law, but typical antitrust frameworks rarely view
market inefficiencies primarily through the lens of racial equality.
The difficulty in connecting antitrust law with the goal of remedying racially skewed market outcomes is underscored by a frank scholarly
admission: "[T]here seems to be a widespread, implicit belief (at least
among [W]hite males) that race and gender discrimination is not a serious
problem" in markets defined by products and not workers.2 Accordingly,
scholars have engaged in just a few studies of the role that race plays in
structuring modern marketplace interactions between seller and buyer
and the overall racially polarized structure of market movements within
industries. The lack of credible information, particularly regarding the
role of race in structuring decisions about what to sell and to whom, is
troubling if one cares about remedying these market problems. The Article's empirical analysis and supporting contextual research regarding the
market for Hollywood feature films suggests that racial differentials in
marketplace outcomes, primarily in film distribution differentials, are
1.
Studying the real-life consequences of racial bias in these markets is not an entirely new phenomenon, but it is still a largely undeveloped field. [an Ayres is among
leaders in the field and has made many important contributions. Prior to his widely cited
car audit experiment, few legal scholars had broached the subject. See, e.g., Ian Ayres &
Peter Siegelman, Race and Gender Discrimination in Bargainingfor a New Car, 85 AM. ECON.
REV. 304 (1995); see also IAN AYRES, PERVASIVE PREJUDICE? UNCONVENTIONAL EVIDENCE OF
RACE AND GENDER DISCRIMINATION (2001) [hereinafter PERVASIVE PREJUDICE].
2.
PERVASIVE PREJUDICE, supra note 1, at 3.
3.
See, e.g., id. Ayres notes that "almost no one has tested whether consumers' taste
for discrimination might be directed at a seller's race itself (or the race of a seller's employees). This failure to test is unjustified." But see Daria Roithmayr, Barriers to Entry: a Market
Lock-in Model of Discrimination,86 VA. L. REV. 727 (2000) (applying antitrust principles to
theories of discrimination in law school markets).
FALL 2012]
Hollywood's PerpetualAntitrust Dilemma
3
caused in part by the anticompetitive nature of the market itself. Therefore, the goals of this Article are twofold: (1) to move further toward
engaging antitrust scholarship w (...truncated)