Consider This from NPR - Kimmel cancellation renews questions about free speech
Episode Date: September 18, 2025President Trump has said for years that he wants Jimmy Kimmel off the air. Now, ABC and its parent company Disney have put the show on indefinite hiatus. One key player here is the chairman of the F...ederal Communications Commission, Brendan Carr. Today he applauded ABC’s decision, posting on X, “Broadcast TV stations have always been required by their licenses to operate in the public interest.”Kimmel’s cancellation reopens questions about free speech, the role of the FCC, and the relationship between the commission and the White House.NPR political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro and former FCC chairman Tom Wheeler shed some light on those questions. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Alejandra Marquez Janse and Marc Rivers, with audio engineering by Ted Mebane and Tiffany Vera Castro.It was edited by Megan Pratz and Sarah Handel.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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First, it was The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.
You may have heard the news.
Last week, we learned that the late show
will be ending in May.
Now, Jimmy Kimmel Live is off the air
indefinitely after ABC suspended its host.
The fallout came after the comedian Jimmy Kimmel referenced Charlie Kirk's assassination
during his Monday night monologue.
We hit some new lows over the weekend with the Maga Gang desperately trying to characterize
this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them
and doing everything they can to score political points from.
Police haven't announced a motive for Kirk's killing.
Kimmel's suggestion that the alleged shooter was a MAGA supporter got a stark reaction from the right.
ABC's suspension came after threats that Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, made Wednesday night on the podcast The Benny Show.
It's hosted by conservative commentator Benny Johnson. Here's what Carr said.
I mean, look, we can do this the easy way or the hard way. These companies can find ways to change conduct to take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there's going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.
In that interview, Carr said the FCC could take action against the ABC.
affiliates who carry Jimmy Kimmel's show.
And today aboard Air Force One, President Trump suggested the possibility of going further
by revoking licenses of TV networks that, in his view, air negative things about him.
They give me only bad for listening, more press.
I mean, they're getting a license.
I would think maybe their license should be taken away.
It will be up to Brendan Carr.
Consider this.
The FCC is in charge of regulating broadcast media.
But Kimmel's suspension raises questions about freedom of speech in the U.S.
And about the FCC's role.
From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro.
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It's Consider This from NPR.
Comedian Jimmy Kimmel being pulled off the air has taken the conversation around freedom of speech to a new level
after Charlie Kirk's assassination had already ignited that debate.
This is a pivotal moment in the country with lots of important questions that center on power, money, and democracy itself.
I spoke about this moment with NPR senior political editor and correspondent to Menico Montanaro,
and I asked him why Kimmel's comment had such a strong reaction from Republicans.
You know, after Kirk's assassination, the alleged shooter's motives were still not well known.
I mean, there was discussion about the inscriptions of the bullets, the meme in gamer culture around them,
and how some of this may have been prevalent with some who didn't like Kirk from the right.
But, you know, we didn't describe motive because as journalists we're trying to be as cautious as possible until the facts are made clear.
But that doesn't stop the Internet on either side from assuming what people want to conclude.
Comedians and journalists, though, of course, not the same.
The Federal Communications Commission has gotten involved and started the domino effect that apparently led to Kimmel being taken off the air indefinitely, according to ABC.
What was the FCC's role here?
Right. Really, we saw all of this start in motion after FCC Chairman Brendan Carr yesterday went on the Benny Show, a podcast hosted by Benny Johnson, a conservative right-wing podcaster. Here's what he said.
And they have a license granted by us at the FCC. And that comes with it an obligation to operate in the public interest. And we can get into some ways that we've been trying to reinvigorate the public interest and some changes that we've seen. But frankly, when you see stuff like this, I mean, look, we can do this the easy way or the hard way.
these companies can find ways to change conduct, to take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or, you know,
there's going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.
Yeah, I mean, Kimmel has a long history of just eviscerating Trump and other conservatives,
and that's irritated them for years.
Going after him and his show this way is similar to the playbook of operationalizing political
retribution that we've seen from Trump here in his second term.
Trump certainly said during the campaign that he was going to seek retribution, and he appointed
a loyalist known for conservative views to run the FCC. Is it typical for the FCC to comment on
individual performers or companies in this way? Historically, it hasn't been, but Carr has talked
about wanting to rebalance the legacy media and have a more active FCC to do so. He cites the
public interest standard, which he says is meant to hold broadcasters accountable for news distortion
and broadcast hoaxes. Others disagree with how he's applying that standard, though. I said at the top
that this is about power, money, and democracy itself. Where does money factor in here?
I mean, this is a marriage of politics and money, of course. I mean, let's follow the money here
a little bit. And I think things become a little clearer. Next Star Media owns a lot of broadcast
stations across the country. They are on the verge of merging with Tegna, a competitor, but there's a
problem. FCC's put a limit on how wide the reach is supposed to be for local broadcasters.
and with this merger, Next Star would exceed that.
FCC Chairman Carr has said he's open to changing the rule
and lifting the cap, calling it arcane and artificial,
though there's some question as to whether the FCC can do it on its own
or, you know, if they need Congress to do so.
But follow the bouncing ball here.
Carr goes on Benny Johnson's podcast.
Just hours later, NextStar announces that it's going to preempt Jimmy Kimmel live
on all of its stations, and then Kimmel is pulled.
It's not a far leap to understand that a lot of companies
are doing what they can to stay in the good graces of the Trump administration
because there's just a lot of money at stake.
That was NPR's senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.
To better understand the FCC's role and its power in this story,
I also spoke with Tom Wheeler, who led the agency under President Obama.
I first asked him what his reaction was to ABC's decision to suspend Kimmel.
Well, you know, my reaction was to Brendan Carr's reaction to what ABC
decided and
the fact
what Kimmel had said
because what Brendan did
was come out
and say to the affiliates
hey you guys ought to do
something about this
which is a highly
unusual
if not unprecedented role
for the chairman of the FCC
unusual unprecedented
talk about the leverage
that the FCC has
over affiliates
saying not to Disney or ABC
you need to do something
about this but to the
affiliates.
specifically it's huge because the um the affiliates are broad king on airwaves that are licensed by the FCC and therefore
every heartbeat of the FCC chairman is something they pay a lot of attention to and the shocking thing was
when when Brendan Carr comes out and says well we can do this two ways the hard way or the easy way that's a
really a subtle way of sounding like some B-movie actor saying it'd be a terrible thing, you know.
Some would argue it's not that subtle.
In that podcast interview, Carr said broadcasters, quote, are running the possibility of fines or license revocations from the FCC if we continue to run content with a pattern of news distortion.
Of course, Kimmel doesn't work for the news division.
He's a comedian.
But can the FCC find or revoke licenses that distort news in the view of the chairman?
no that if this had gone to court then i have absolutely no doubt that the first amendment would
have kicked in and there would not be authority in the statute even but are you know there's
something that's even more powerful here it's far beyond the the comments of a comic and that is
on the plane on the way back from europe today president trump said that they should pull the
licenses of any affiliates who are, who are a quote, against him, unquote.
And it raised the dynamics of this whole thing beyond a late-night comic to autocratic control of the media.
Well, except if, as you say, the First Amendment would win in court, why is the media following what the FCC chairman or potentially the president wants?
because their future is controlled let me just give you one specific example with um there is now a merger
pending before the FCC that uh of uh of next are the largest uh station group in the country
and tanga uh another large station group and the FCC not only has to approve that uh merger but
But they also have to change the rules.
Now, let's just think back.
When was the last time we saw the FCC look at a broadcast merger?
Oh, it was CBS.
And Brendan Carr made it clear he would not approve that merger until CBS settled with Donald
Trump on the specious suit about 60 minutes.
So obviously, there are business interests here.
But to return to Brendan Carr's complaint, does the FCC have an obligation to make sure
that broadcasters are accurate.
The job of the FCC, of course,
if there is a clear and misleading misrepresentation,
if there is obscenity and things like this,
but the fact of the matter is that this is a judgment call
as to what is, quote, the public interest, unquote, interpretation.
And Brendan Carr has just taken that,
that the vagueness of that term and turned it into a tool for the Trump administration
to intimidate and coerce those that they license.
Late-night comedians have always criticized and mocked politicians.
When you were chair of the FCC, did complaints about late-night comedians ever cross your radar?
Did you ever consider taking action against them?
You know, I don't recall any late-night comedian complaints.
I recall other complaints, but I always believe that the First Amendment was principal here.
Did those other complaints ever come from the White House?
No.
How important is that independence from the president and the administration?
It's crucial.
And that was the way that the Congress set up the FCC in 1934 to be an independent agency.
But last February, Donald Trump issued an executive order overruling that and saying it's
no longer an independent, that it will review all of its considered actions and final actions
with the White House.
President Obama, former President Obama, who you served when you were chair of the FCC,
today tweeted, this is precisely the kind of government coercion that the First Amendment
was designed to prevent, and media companies need to start standing up rather than capitulating
to it.
What kind of cost might a media company pay if they were to try to defy the federal government
in a situation like this.
I mean, you've said you think they would win in court.
But even if they do eventually reach that ultimate outcome, what price do they pay in the
meantime?
So it's clear that the Trump administration is a vengeance-based administration and that there
would be looking for opportunities to, you know, take a stick to them.
You know, what we're looking at right now, Ari, is a new iteration of the cancel
culture that Trump for so long had complained about. This is cancel culture 2.0, where you leverage
the FCC to affect what people hear by influencing what media outlets can say.
And do you think Trump's statement aboard Air Force One today that licenses could be revoked
that cover him in what he deems an unflattering way could be the next step, or do you think
it's an idle threat?
It's frightening, and he threw it to Brendan Carr, said he's a great patriot, and I trust him to make the decision.
But that kind of intimidation on matters protected by the First Amendment is absolutely outrageous.
That was Tom Wheeler, former FCC chair and current visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution.
This episode was produced by Alejandro Marcus Hansi and
and Mark Rivers, with audio engineering by Ted Nebane and Tiffany Veracastro.
It was edited by Megan Pratt and Sarah Handel.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Ari Shapiro.
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