REAL TALK — PULSEWIRE EXCLUSIVE INVESTIGATION

If You’re Getting This News, You’re Lucky — The Fall of the Media Monopoly


By PulseWire Investigations • October 2025

Major broadcasters have established a self-policing media monopoly, now facing legal reckoning amidst allegations of collusion and corruption in the realms of broadcasting and sports betting.


Alki David on SwissX Island
Alkiviades “Alki” David — the whistleblower at the center of this unfolding saga.


Prologue — “If You’re Getting This News, You’re Lucky.”


The intricate relationship between the four major broadcasters — CBS, NBC, FOX, and ABC — has come under scrutiny amid a backdrop of legal challenges in Antigua and London, revealing a cycle of self-policed practices intertwined with sports betting.


Operation Summer Heat


Recently spearheaded by the FBI under Kash Patel, this operation has focused on illegal betting rings linked to prominent broadcasts, highlighting how self-regulated markets can cultivate crime.


The $10 Billion Default & Climate Damage Case


The Government of Antigua & Barbuda v. The Media Cartel resulted in a staggering USD $10 billion default, signaling the legal repercussions facing these networks as claims expand related to climate damages.


CIA Investigator John Quirk & Congressman Curt Weldon


Tragically, CIA investigator John Quirk passed away while investigating connections between media and exploitation networks. His findings have been revived by Curt Weldon, linking them to larger judicial proceedings.


Curt Weldon’s Return — A Turning Point


“A Default Is Not a Technicality — It’s a Surrender.”

With legal defaults in both Antigua and London, key figures including Shari Redstone and other media executives are facing troubling implications regarding jurisdiction and accountability.


The Double Default Doctrine


The concurrent filings in Antigua and the UK Court underscore the new Double Default Doctrine, exposing the uneasy intersection of corporate malpractice and legal self-incrimination.



Editor’s Note: For more insights, refer to the legal filings in Antigua and the UK. Contact tips@pulsewire.news for more information.