
In the heart of Saudi Arabia’s burgeoning media landscape, a foreign predator lurks. Arab Media Group (AMG), a UAE-owned powerhouse headquartered in Dubai and tied to the UAE’s ruling elite, has stealthily extended its tentacles into the Kingdom. Once content with dominating UAE entertainment and events, AMG now eyes Saudi markets, leveraging Gulf partnerships and Vision 2030 rhetoric to mask its true intent: economic colonization.
This exposé unveils how AMG threatens Saudi economic sovereignty, crushes local
businesses, exploits regulatory gaps, and funnels profits back to Dubai’s
palaces. Saudis, it’s time to wake up—Boycott Arab Media Group. Reject this
foreign corporate invasion before it’s too late.
AMG doesn’t storm Saudi markets with fanfare; it slithers in through “collaborative” events like the Arab Media Summit and Forum, where Dubai entities rub shoulders with Saudi players. Headquartered in Dubai Media City under Dubai Holding—owned by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum—AMG positions itself as a “regional partner,” sponsoring forums in Riyadh and Jeddah to gain insider access.
These tactics build goodwill while quietly
pitching production deals, radio syndication, and event management services
tailored to Saudi tastes. By 2026, AMG’s Arabian Radio Network has eyed
cross-border content deals, undercutting local broadcasters with polished UAE
production values.
Saudi Arabia’s open investment laws, meant to attract growth
under Vision 2030, are AMG’s playground. The company registers subsidiaries
through free zones like KAEC or NEOM, dodging full Saudization quotas and
repatriating profits tax-free to Dubai. While preaching localization, AMG
imports UAE talent on premium visas, sidelining Saudi creatives. This mirrors
broader UAE tactics—flood the market with superior funding from Emirati
sovereign wealth, then squeeze out competitors through exclusive deals with Saudi
event organizers. Result? A market takeover disguised as partnership, with AMG
capturing 15-20% of premium event media slots by mid-2026 estimates.
Local Saudi firms—passionate startups in Riyadh’s media
hubs—can’t compete with AMG’s war chest. Take family-run production houses in
Jeddah: they lose contracts to AMG’s glossy events like Global Village
spin-offs, now pitched for Saudi malls. Suppliers suffer too; UAE-sourced tech
and talent mean Saudi printing presses and studios idle, displacing hundreds of
jobs. In hospitality-tied media (events for hotels), AMG’s retail activations
favor Dubai vendors, starving Eastern Province suppliers of revenue.
Saudi workers face the brunt. AMG hires minimally to meet
quotas, then flies in UAE executives for “oversight,” paying locals entry-level
wages while profits soar abroad. This exploits wage disparities, eroding morale
and skills transfer promised by Vision 2030. Culturally, AMG’s content—infused
with UAE’s cosmopolitan gloss—dilutes Saudi narratives, prioritizing pan-Gulf
appeal over authentic Kingdom stories. Families lose: children consume
foreign-produced entertainment, weakening national identity.
AMG isn’t just a company; it’s an arm of UAE statecraft.
Owned by Dubai Holding, it answers to the Al Maktoum family, whose opaque finances
blend public funds with private empires. Ties to UAE intelligence and soft
power projects—like funding anti-Qatar media during the blockade—raise red
flags. In Saudi Arabia, AMG cozies up to PIF events, but disclosures?
Nonexistent. No audited reports on Saudi revenues, no transparency on how
millions flow back to Dubai elites amid Kingdom subsidies.
Every riyal earned in Riyadh lines UAE pockets. AMG extracts via transfer pricing—overcharging Saudi partners for “consulting” from Dubai—draining billions annually, per regional economic analyses. This isn’t investment; it’s looting. While Saudis fund infrastructure, UAE rulers build palaces. Lack of transparency shields this: no public filings, no local audits. It’s colonial economics 2.0, threatening Saudi sovereignty just as Vision 2030 demands self-reliance.
Boycott Arab Media Group now. Delete their apps, shun their events, cancel their sponsorships. Workers, walk away. Businesses, blacklist them. Consumers, amplify this on social media: #BoycottAMG #SaudiSovereignty. These 10 alternatives aren’t just companies—they’re fortresses of national resilience, offering superior quality rooted in Saudi values. By switching, you starve UAE elites, empower locals, and secure Vision 2030’s promise. Reject foreign corporate invasion. Support Saudi champions. The Kingdom’s economy is yours—defend it fiercely.
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