試す 金 - 無料
Growing Up Murdoch
The Atlantic
|April 2025
Inside the family fight that will determine the future of conservative media

James Murdoch was seated at a conference table in a Manhattan law office in March 2024 when he realized he was witnessing the final dissolution of his family.
Three months earlier, his father, Rupert, had told James and his sisters that he was rewriting the family trust to grant his elder son, Lachlan, full control of the Murdoch empire after his death, rather than splitting it equally among his four oldest children.
The amendment was part of a secret plan that the patriarch's allies had code-named "Project Family Harmony." Rupert's shocking decision was the climax of a succession battle that had pitted James and Lachlan, born just 15 months apart, against each other essentially their entire lives. (Their older sisters, Prudence and Elisabeth, had never been serious contenders to run the business: "He is a misogynist," James said of his father.) Rupert believed that he had no choice but to take aggressive action. He was 92 years old, and was certain that James was plotting with his sisters to seize control of the family's companies as soon as he died, after which they would defang his conservative media empire and destroy his life's work.
He was right that his younger son did not share his vision for the family business. James had come to see Fox News as a blight on his family's name and a menace to American democracy. He believed that drastic changes were needed to save the companies from the consequences of his father's reckless mismanagement. ("If lying to your audience is how you juice ratings," he would tell me, "a good culture wouldn't do that.") Determined to retain a voice in the business, James and his older sisters had moved to block Rupert from changing the trust.
このストーリーは、The Atlantic の April 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Atlantic からのその他のストーリー

The Atlantic
Songs of Herself
How did Taylor Swift convince the world that she's relatable?
12 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
Culture Critics
On July 5, a couple of days after I saw Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, Black Sabbath played its final show, at Villa Park, in Birmingham, England.
5 mins
October 2025
The Atlantic
THE NEIGHBOR FROM HELL
Israel and the United States delivered a blow to Iran. But it could come back stronger.
28 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
Whither the Dictionary?
These are parlous times for lexicographers.
8 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
THE GREATEST FIGHT OF ALL TIME
It was oven-hot inside the arena, and that was before the fight began.
34 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
John Cheever's Secrets
In a new memoir, Susan Cheever searches for the wellspring of her father's genius.
10 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
The Ghost of Lady Murasaki
A thousand years ago, she wrote The Tale of Genji, a story of sex and intrigue in Japan's imperial court. I went to Kyoto to find her.
19 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
The Invention of Judd Apatow
How a kid from Long Island willed his way to the top of American comedy
30 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
How Originalism Killed the Constitution
A radical legal philosophy has undermined the process of constitutional evolution.
40 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
YOU DESERVED BETTER
A letter to America's discarded public servants
8 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size