On with Kara Swisher - Why FCC Chair Brendan Carr Is a Dangerous Moron
Episode Date: May 21, 2026Kara is joined by FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, Knight First Amendment Institute executive director Jameel Jaffer, and The Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to discuss FCC Chairman Brendan Carr’s esc...alating campaign against media companies, broadcasters and speech President Trump dislikes. They discuss Carr’s threats against ABC/Disney, his attempts to revive old rules around “equal time” and “news distortion,” and the Trump administration's broader push to control federal agencies. They also explain how Carr's actions create a chilling effect on free speech, and why media companies must fight back. Plus: Why Nilay says Carr's actions towards broadcasters are a "test balloon" for future internet regulation. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Threads, and Bluesky @onwithkaraswisher. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Why is he shifted like this?
You and I both know he was not this way, not this way.
He was a deregulatory Republican during Trump won.
And now he's a MAGA warrior.
And I think he's just like a political animal.
I think he sees his lucrative podcast paid for by, you know, illegal supplements in the future.
And that's going to be a great exit ramp for him.
Hi, everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is on with Tara Swisher.
And I'm Kara Swisher.
My guest today are FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez,
Jamil Jaffer, Executive Director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University,
and Nilai Patel, editor-in-chief of The Verge, and host of the Dakota podcast and The Vergecast.
I gather them for a long-awaited episode about FCC chairman Brendan Carr
and his moronic behavior and his problematic actions, and they go hand in hand,
just for people don't know, specifically how he's weaponized the formerly independent
federal regulatory agency and turned it essentially into a propaganda arm of the Trump administration.
This is not just my opinion. The stuff he has done is really egregious, and I wanted to talk about it.
Earlier this week, the Legal Accountability Center of Bipartisan Watchdog filed complaints in Washington, D.C.
in Maryland against Carr, and asked for an investigation stating that he, quote, violated his ethical
obligations as a licensed attorney. In response, Carr, ever moronically told status news, Oliver Darcy
quote, I'm going to keep doing my job, whatever activist groups like this think, notwithstanding,
I'm just going to keep filing ahead, end quote. I don't even know what that means. And most things
with Brandon Carr seem moronic, but actually they're quite focused on quashing free speech for
media companies who do not tow the Trump line. And so I really want to talk about it. Commissioner Gomez
is the sole Democratic commissioner at the FCC, and she's been an outspoken critic of Carr's attempts to pressure
broadcasters for political purposes.
Jamil Jaffer and the Knight Institute have condemned, among other things,
Carr's use of the FCC's public interest standard as a tool to target viewpoints the Trump
administration disagrees with.
Neil I. Patel has been closely tracking cars' moves since the early days of his appointment.
He has a recurring segment on the Verge cast called Brendan Carr is a dummy.
Stay tuned through the credits to hear a Brendan-inspired song from a fan.
As I said, it's important to talk about this right now.
because this is an agency that's being used as a cudgel by the Trump administration as outlined in Project 2025.
And the chapter that Brendan Carr wrote was about the FCC and now he's running it.
Our expert question today comes from Adam Mockler, a YouTuber, podcast host, and reporter at Midas Touch.
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Commissioner Gomez, Jamil, and Nilai.
Thanks for coming on on. I appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks for having us.
This is a topic.
Neelai and I have been discussing a lot.
I called Brennan Carr a moron and he calls him dumb, I believe.
Yes, this is the biggest beef in tech media, I think, is whether he's a moron or a dummy.
Right, exactly. We're having a beef about that.
But actually, I want to get to really substantive discussion with some.
happening here because, you know, there have been FCC chairman who've been controversial, but this
guy is sort of winning the prize. So I'd like you to pick the most egregious thing Carr has done
so far and explain why it concerns you. We're going to get into more detail as we go. So maybe
keep it higher level. Let's start with you, Commissioner Gomez, and then Jamil and Nilai.
Well, again, thank you for having me here. Let me tell you that this is not just the FCC.
Of course, we've seen that this is an administration-wide campaign of censorship and control is what I call it.
And the FCC is one of the weapons that this administration uses because licensees want something out of the FCC.
And so there's a lot of bullying that's happening.
But the most egregious thing this FCC has done to date has been calling up the local licenses that Disney has for renewal.
That is just a direct assault on the First Amendment.
you know, there's nothing more important to a broadcaster than their license. It is their lifeblood.
And this was directly meant to threaten Disney.
Absolutely. Because it's not about the local stations, right? It's about they don't like Jimmy Kimmel. They don't like the view.
Explain what the local, so people who don't understand. This is something that comes up every, and their local, ABC has affiliates, are correct.
So explain that for people who don't understand.
Yes, that's right. So there's hundreds of ABC affiliates throughout the country. Disney only owns itself and operates eight of them.
Key markets and key big markets usually. Yes, they're in very good markets. And so the FCC does not license the networks. The FCC only licenses the local broadcast stations because it licenses the airwaves over which these stations operate their stations.
And it is using that leverage to get at content that it doesn't like.
And so the reason this is the most outrageous thing, and the FCC's done a lot against the First Amendment
and to try to pressure companies into changing either what they broadcast, how they broadcast it,
or even their diversity equity and inclusion policies, which to me also have a First Amendment component to them.
But the reason this is the most egregious is because it is so unprecedented.
it is directly tied to content that they don't like, and it's dangerous.
All right, Jim, Neil?
Yeah, I'm not actually sure how to choose between all these terrible things that Brendan Carr is doing.
It's like the opposite of having to choose between my children.
But, you know, I actually think that one of the most outrageous features of this assault on free speech is that it's being conducted in the name of free speech.
you know, when Brendan Carr tries to justify all of these actions against broadcasters and against
media organizations more broadly, you know, he points to free speech. He says, you know, I'm doing this
to ensure that Americans' voices are heard and that nobody is silence. And that is really just an
outrageous reversal or sort of fun house mirror image of what's actually going on. You know,
what Brendan Carr is engaged in is censorship. You know, he's,
is chilling speech, he's suppressing speech directly. He's using government power to silence
voices that are supposed to be, you know, free. Media organizations in the United States are supposed
to get to decide within extremely broad parameters, what kinds of news they cover, how they cover it,
what kinds of commentary they offer, which voices they platform. Like all of those things are left
to private individuals and organizations to decide.
That's a feature of the First Amendment.
That's sort of the core idea of the First Amendment is that those things are for individuals and not the government.
Right.
And so he's using it saying there has to be equal voices.
He's doing, we'll get to the equal time rule in a second.
Nelai.
Well, I certainly agree with Commissioner Gunniz that going after Disney in the particular way he's going after it,
that company calling in the licenses early, which just hasn't been done in forever.
That's by far the most egregious.
But I, you know, we do a segment on our show The Vergecast every week called
Brennan Carr's Dummy because every week there's something and we can just pull it out of
the ether.
And what I would say and what I'm trying to communicate to our audience is he's not a sophisticated
actor.
This is a blunt instrument.
And actually, maybe it's because I'm not a member of the DC Bar and I don't have to be
flight.
He's also a bad lawyer.
Like the way he's going about imposing chilling effects by pulling random words out of
statutes by inverts.
by inverting the idea of free speech.
It's so stupid.
Like, maybe that bothers me the most.
Like, you don't have to figure it out.
You can just say, oh, the president doesn't like Jimmy Kimmel.
The broadcast licenses have been pulled up for renewal.
It's obvious what he's doing and trying to wrap it in the language of statutory interpretation
or saying that the airwaves are meant for the public interest or pretending that Tegna and NextAr are just small local broadcasters who just need some.
help against the big bads.
Explain who Tegna and Nexstar.
They're two local.
Tegna and Estar are the owners of most of the local TV stations in the United States.
And now they're merging.
And in fact, they push their merger ahead, assuming they would get regulatory approval,
that they had begun merging even before they were told to stop by the courts because
they haven't actually gotten all the approvals.
That is the level of quid pro quo we see in the Trump administration.
So you just see Brendan is using the language that.
It's meant to protect speech.
He's using the language that from a statutory perspective is meant to slow down regulatory processes and make sure they're rigorous and correct.
And instead, like a dummy, he's just pulling words and saying, oh, I can use these words and I can redefine them in order to attack speech the president doesn't like.
And I don't think it matters what your political persuasion is.
If you just care how it works, you look at that.
You say, that's horrible.
That means anything goes.
Because a Democrat could do it, presumably a Democratic.
A Democrat could do it.
At this point, I sort of hope some Democrats start doing it so everybody understands how dangerous it is, right?
A Democrat wielding the power of what's called unitary executive theory might be good for our country, right?
If we get to that point because I think everyone would understand, oh, our system is meant to have checks and balances.
And Brendan in particular is an example of what happens when there are no checks and balances.
Absolutely.
So let's get to the news around this, the view in its network ABC and the parent company Disney.
And let's add Kimmel to that because that's been, you know,
an ongoing issue for President Trump because he doesn't have a sense of humor. As we said, the FCC has
been investigating the view for months, and it recently called for a review of the licenses of
eight of Disney's ABC local stations years before they expire, as you noted, Commissioner Gomez.
Now Disney's actually fighting back because Disney slash ABC, it's the owner of ABC,
accusing the FCC of violating its free speech rights. Last week, Commissioner Gomez, you sent a letter
to Disney CEO, Josh DeMorrow, he's the new CEO, stating,
that ABC was a victim of, quote, a sustained, coordinated campaign of censorship in control by the Trump
administration. Talk about why you sent the letter and what's the significance of the network's
pushback because they had been relatively quiet under Bob Eiger and had made some payoffs
previously related to George Stepanopoulos. That was a different thing. But talk a little bit about
why you sent the letter. Yes. So I have been calling out this administration for its First Amendment
violations for quite some time now. But with this letter, I've taken the fight directly to these
companies. And I'm sending a message directly to them saying, you know, grow a spine. Understand
that the rules and the facts are in your favor. And I'm very happy to see that Disney appears to have
grown a spine and is in fact pushing back because it does have the facts, the public, and the
First Amendment behind it. And, you know, Disney's filing with a,
was very interesting.
And in fact, it was kind of shocking
because if you read their filing,
let's start with the fact that the filing is brilliantly written.
It is really a legal brief in defense of the First Amendment.
And it told us some shocking things
that Disney claims in its response to the FCC's investigation
into the view.
The FCC apparently went to the other ABC stations in the market
because the complaint on the investigation
is only against the ABC station.
The FCC told them to file the paperwork on the candidate appearance, which was James Talleyco.
I'll get to that, yeah. Let me just see. For people that know, the FCC is looking into whether the view violated old federal rules requiring equal airtime to rival political candidates.
Back in January, Carr issued guidance essentially reminding broadcasters, but the rule hadn't been enforced in decades.
Let me play this clip of Brendan Carr in February talking about equal time and the view on Fox.
Disney has a program called The View, and they've been asserting the position that the View,
is what's known as bonafide news in the statute.
If you're bonafide news, you don't have to give candidates equal airtime.
But Disney and the view have not established that that program is, in fact, bona fide news.
We've started an enforcement proceeding taking a look at that.
And again, we're going to hold broadcasters accountable.
The days that these legacy media broadcasters get to decide what we can say, what we can think,
who we can vote for are over.
And I think President Trump played a key role in just smashing the facade that they still get to decide the narrative.
All right, continue, Commissioner Gomez.
And then I want Neelai to weigh in on what he's attempting to do by enforcing the rule.
Go ahead, Commissioner Gomez.
So what the FCC did was it went to the affiliates that are not owned by ABC and told them,
you need to file the paperwork on the James Taylor Rico appearance.
And apparently, according to Disney, told them they would not get in trouble for filing late
because no one had filed that appearance.
Then it turned around and it used the fact that.
those stations that it forced to file these appearances as evidence against Disney's station.
Right. So it asked them to do it. It asked them to do it. And it did not reach out to Disney in the
same way. Even though they have affiliates. Right. Owned it operated. Yeah. If that's true,
to me, that's a setup. It's a form of entrapment. And that is also part of this outrageous
actions that the FCC is taking against Disney. So, Neel, I break this.
it down, what is he attempting to do by enforcing this rule? This is, it is a news program. It
interviews people. It talks about the news by any stretch of cable or anything else. It's a news program.
But break it down, what's he attempting to do by enforcing the rule? And why is he wrong?
I think he's attempting to impose speech controls on the rest of Disney's content.
One of the reasons that I think this is so dumb is that it kind of doesn't matter if eight
broadcast stations go away that people aren't watching them. They're watching TikTok. They're
watching Disney Plus. Brendan is using the statutory power he has over broadcast stations, which are
important and matter to quite a few people, but they're not important to everyone. So he's using
the power he has over the broadcast stations to pressure Disney into adjusting the content
that it distributes over channels where the FCC has no authority, like Disney Plus, like YouTube,
like the internet. And you can see the connection very clearly. This all started with NBC back
during the election when Kamala Harris was on Saturday Night Live. Saturday Night Live is maybe
the only program in America that actually understands the equal time rule because they do have
political figures on that show all the time they have for years and there's no chance they're
going to get the news exception, right? They can't even pretend. So Kamala Harris showed up on Saturday
Live that right wing went crazy. Brendan started fulminating about it. But of course NBC had filed
the paperwork. And I think he's been looking for an excuse to do this ever since so that the
rest of the content, which he cannot regulate, somehow comes under his control. He will threaten
your business, which is even in decline, which honestly most young Americans do not care about
so that you can affect the business that maybe is in growth that young Americans do care about.
So Carr regularly invokes the FCC's news distortion policy and often brings it up
in the agency's public interest standard. Here, he is speaking with right-wing podcaster
Benny Johnson last September, just hours before Jimmy Kimmel's temporary suspension from ABC.
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. Okay, hard way or easy way, because he's such a scary figure.
In a March post on X, Carr also threatened to deny or revoke broadcast licenses from broadcasters
that are, quote, running hoaxes and news distortions, also known as the fake news. This is a response
to critical coverage of the Iran war that Trump disliked. Jamil, from a legal perspective,
what is exactly news distortion? How does Carr?
attempting to use it as policy, chill free speech, because it's obvious it's kind of a clottish
attempt with clottish language, but it's pretty clear what he's trying to do.
Yeah, I mean, so news distortion is supposed to be this very, you know, narrow rule that
prohibits deliberate and material distortion of the news by media organization, senior leadership.
But this is a power that has not been used in generations.
So it's distortion, meaning you're putting out what is.
is actually fake news, correct?
Yeah, I mean, I think that, you know, one thing that's really important for people to understand is that, you know, the Supreme Court has sometimes suggested, sometimes said, that the government has broader authority to regulate broadcasters because broadcasters are relying on government issued monopolies over spectrum.
And there's a limited amount of spectrum.
And so, you know, there's a certain amount of prioritizing that the government has to do.
and they can prioritize with the public interest in mind.
And that is a kind of framework that applies only to broadcast and not to other media.
But whatever, you know, and there's been this debate for a long time about what is the scope of the government's power to regulate broadcasters, you know, how does that differ from the scope of the government's power to regulate other forms of media?
But whatever the answers to that question, I don't think there's, you know, any arguments at all that the government has the power that the FCC,
has the power to regulate on the basis of viewpoint. The Supreme Court has never suggested that. And to the
contrary, even in cases, it's a case called Red Lion from the 1970s, which upheld what was called the
Ferenness Doctrine, even in that case, which is sort of the broadest articulation of the government's
power to regulate broadcast, even in that case, the court emphasized that the government doesn't
have the authority to restrict speech on the basis of viewpoint. But that is precisely what Brendan Carr is
engaged in on a, you know, almost daily basis.
So every episode we get a question from an outside expert, here's yours.
Hey, Adam Mockler here with the expert question.
I may not look like or be an expert on this topic, but I do run a political YouTube
channel with a few million followers where we talk about American politics.
So freedom of speech and the chilling effect on the press is something I oftentimes think
about.
My question to Commissioner Gomez, to Mr. Pertal, and Mr. Jaffer would be the following.
Brendan Carr has built this entire career as this free speech warrior, but right when he got into power,
he wielded it to try to revoke the broadcast licenses of a few large stations and shows, right?
What is the actual mechanism by which he can enforce this?
Is there an enforcement mechanism, or is what they're going for more of a chilling effect on the speech of people?
Sometimes I can't tell with this administration when they're just bullying people for a, you know, a chilling effect,
versus when they're actually trying to fundamentally change the system.
Which one do you think it is in this case?
Yeah, I mean, I think they're absolutely real sanctions associated with some of the threats that
Brendan Carr and other administration officials are making.
I mean, just to take one example, withholding approval for a merger can, you know,
can have billion-dollar implications.
And that's a very real sanction.
Now, I wouldn't separate that from the chilling effect.
The chilling effect is a result of the fact that at the end of this process,
there might be a real sanction. But the chilling effect is much, much broader than, you know,
goes much further than just the institutions that are directly targeted. You know, when Brendan Carr
targets, you know, Paramount or Skydance, you know, other media organizations are watching very
carefully because they know that they could be next. And the chilling effect results in, you know,
people deciding, you know, sometimes this is called anticipatory obedience, like even without
the threat, people deciding, you know what, maybe it's better.
if we don't air Jimmy Kimmel or we don't air Stephen Colbert. And they just decided on their own without
anybody needing to make the threat. And that's the real risk, I think, that we're getting into
the situation where we're censoring ourselves. Right. All right. Commissioner Gomez?
Yeah, I've been saying all along that it's the threats that are the point. Nobody wants to get
dragged before the FCC in an investigation over the content of their broadcast. You know,
I started a tour of the country where I go to local communities and I talk about the threats to the
First Amendment from this administration. And every single stop, every single one, there's a broadcaster
there that says, what am I allowed to say? And what I always say to them is, it is not my job to tell you that.
My job is to ensure that you have the platform to give us a viewpoint. And we want diverse viewpoints.
But this administration is pushing toward, in a lot of ways, including through these mergers,
having one viewpoint that the public sees and hears. And that in of itself is a First Amendment.
violation. It's a First Amendment violation of viewers and listeners not being able to see and hear
the content of their choice. Right. And in that case, the sanctions are not, because in this case,
Disney's pushing back, right? And probably they'll win in court. They will absolutely win. And that's why
I say the FCC is a paper tiger. Because if challenged, if this goes to court, the FCC will lose.
Because the First Amendment prohibits us from censoring content and the Communications Act,
which is our authorizing vehicle, which I realize is kind of boring and wonky,
specifically has a section that says you can't censor.
And so they'll lose, but it'll take time for Disney to do so.
And sometimes it's not a thing.
Neli?
Brendan Carr is not using magic word, like, statutory interpretation to regulate broadcast
because he really cares about broadcast.
He's using this like bad, loyering dummy approach to law to threaten Google,
to threaten Verizon, right?
These are the actual distribution points of the content people actually watch.
And Google is a defense contractor, right?
There's a lot of ways a unified Trump administration can threaten Google into changing the YouTube algorithm.
And this stuff, which seems removed from most Americans, which is about television, most people aren't watching, which is our radio stations, most people aren't listening to.
It is just a test balloon for, hey, how can we pressure Verizon or AT&T into throttling content we don't.
don't like on their networks, into picking networks we do like, into making sure video and
X loads more crisply and clearly than video on TikTok or whatever, which is, if you
recall, a hundred years ago, people were warriors from net neutrality because that was the
biggest threat to free speech on the internet, that the carriers would pick and choose.
So here we are, you have an FCC threatening media distribution platforms, broadcast television
and radio stations with the power they have in a capricious way that may not survive legal
challenge, but will certainly cost a lot of money. And the best choice might to just to cave.
And Kara, you know this better than anyone. Our tech titans do not have spines. If they have to
pick between lucrative defense contracts and throttling content on their platforms, what do you think
they're going to pick? Oh, absolutely. No question. But this is why I sent the letter to Disney,
because Disney has, in fact, now shown courage. And Disney has stood up in the past for First Amendment
rights and won. And I think.
think that they need to get credit for that, and we need to encourage that kind of behavior,
because it is only through pushing back that we're going to make sure that this doesn't actually
get any more legs.
Yeah.
What do you think of the new guy?
I don't know him.
I don't know.
But I was pretty pleased that he did this.
Like, I think he's, you know, about had it.
I think they all see the end, I suppose.
And so what's the difference?
And at some point, you know, Brandon Carr is going to end up, you know, a contestant
on dancing with the stars, I guess.
And that'll be that.
But I think it was a good first move.
It was an indicator that said, as you said, what they're really going for is something else.
I do think Commissioner Gomez, you're correct, that they're a paper tiger, but they can still cause problems elsewhere, right?
It's a message, even if they have no real power.
But they do, and it's a messaging situation.
We'll be back in a minute.
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You can watch it on YouTube or listen in your favorite podcast app. Let's talk about
this guy about Brendan Carr's path to the FCC chairman and how the agency is changing.
Carr began his career as a DC attorney at a firm representing telecom clients, including AT&T and
Verizon. In 2012, he joined the FCC as a staff attorney. Former chairman Ajit Pai promoted Carr
to be the agency's general counsel at the start of Trump's first term in 2017. And then when he
became that, he was quite thirsty to get on my podcast, I recall. And I didn't usually do individuals,
especially, I just didn't have them on very much. But compare the FCC of Trump's first term to the current one. And how did Carr evolve into what former FCC chairman Tom Wheeler has described as an activist chairman? Because I recall he was somewhat of an irritant, but not really. He was sort of a, I don't know, a regular Republican, I suppose. Go ahead, Jamil. I mean, I guess, you know, part of what's happened is that the second Trump administration is very different from the first Trump administration. And not just about Brendan Carr.
right now we have this sort of all government assault on free speech again in the name of free speech
and at the night and see we have this case where we're representing technology researchers
who have been threatened with deportation because they are criticizing the major social media
platforms content moderation policies and it's this crazy crazy policy that the Trump administration
has put in place again in the name of free speech they want to deport these tech
researchers for what they're saying in their research. But I think that that's kind of, that reflects
the sort of larger philosophy that the Trump administration is trying to put in place across the board.
It's not just the FCC. There's this effort to, there's this sense, I think, among MAGA types,
or let me just say the Trump administration, at least, there's a sense that, you know, we are being
silenced. Our people are being silenced. And when they say silenced, what they really mean,
is, you know, other people are criticizing us. Other people are disagreeing with us. And they are
trying to shut all of that to each down. And that's what you see with the FCC and the broadcasters,
but you also see it with the Trump administration and legacy news media, you know, the associated
press being expelled from the White House press pool or all of the newspapers. Yeah, the Federal Trade
Commission's gone after content moderation and the advertising companies that refuse to put their
clients' ads in certain places they don't want to.
Platforms.
Before any lie answers, can you explain how the commission works so people understand?
Like, he came to the chairmanship, and some chairman try to get some sort of comedy between
all of you, and others don't.
But explain how it works.
You're the single Democrat.
Is that correct?
Yes.
Normally, there's five commissioners, and there can't be more than three of the same
party, so there would be two minority commissioners.
But right now, we only have three commissioners.
So we have two Republicans and me.
And, you know, on a day-to-day basis, we actually...
And why is that?
Why are there a full five?
Well, one Republican and one Democrat resigned last year.
And there has been no other...
The way that it works is, of course, the president nominates the commissioners and the Senate confirms them.
And there's been no nomination from this White House since.
So we've been operating with a two-to-one, I'm the one, majority for the last
year. And Nile, why is he shifted like this? You and I both know he was not this way, not this way. He was a
deregulatory Republican during Trump one. Yeah. And now he's a Maga Warrior. And I think he's just like a
political animal. I think he sees his lucrative podcast paid for by, you know, illegal supplements in the
future. And that's going to be a great exit ramp for him. If he can be one of these characters and
whatever comes next. The thing I'd point out is I've known a lot of various commissioners, the FCC,
over the past 15 years of running the verge.
And they're mostly, sorry, Commissioner Gomez, pretty technocratic, right?
Like we're doing spectrum policy.
We want to make sure Americans have cheaper, faster broadband, especially in rural places.
And that's what they all talk about.
And you have them on your podcast and no one listens because it's pretty boring,
which is why I think you didn't have Brendan on your podcast in the past.
The shift here into content regulation into saying we're going to go after the platforms
who do content moderation ways we don't like, and we're going to go off to broadcast
or speech they don't like, is all encompassing in the Trump administration.
It is direct from Project 2025.
Brennan Carr wrote the FCC chapter in Project 2025.
Project 2025, taken as a whole, I don't know if anyone wants to rewind their brain, was not
a coherent document.
It was self-contradictory in many places, but the one through line was, we will exert power
over this nation.
And we will make sure people say what we want them to say and punish them when they say
what we don't want them to say. So for people who know, Carr wrote the chapter, as Neely said,
on the FCC for the Conservative Policy Agenda Project 2025, which is, which Trump said he didn't
know anything about, but seems to be following rather closely. He focused on, in his part,
focused on reigning in big tech, banning TikTok and calling out what he viewed as censorship
of conservatives on social media. So to what extent the policy goals he outlined have shifted,
but they've shifted in some way more so. Again, again, you think he's,
doing at the back door to get to social media.
I think we're running test balloons using the power that's there to regulate content on broadcast networks, which is a very loose power.
Again, I think they'll lose if they take these to court.
But you at least have this notion that the FCC has some authority over broadcast stations, right?
And you can go point at them and poke at them really hard.
There's not any statutory equivalent to social media.
There's not any statutory equivalent to Google search.
But there's lots of power the government can exert over those companies.
In other places.
In other places.
And you can run at, boy, we're going to ban TikTok.
It would be horrible if we took TikTok away from the American people unless Larry Ellison showed up to buy it and run the algorithm his way.
And we're going to force the Chinese government into some kind of deal, which, to my knowledge, no one quite understands yet that turns TikTok over to some entity that has some connection in the Trump administration.
And you can just see, oh, we're running this playbook.
We're running an all-of-government speech-control playbook.
And Brendan Carr, his personality is whatever Donald Trump to some extent, but whatever
Russ Vote wants him to do, because that is actually the architect-to-lite playbook.
He also seems to light the limelight.
So the FCC historically has been independent and relatively quiet, I would say.
Obviously, Carr's behavior, including wearing a goal lapel pin, depicting Trump's silhouette
once last year, called that into question.
The agency's independence also came up last December when Carr was.
was questioned by New Mexico Democratic Senator Ben Ray Lujan during the Senate Oversight Committee
hearing. Let's hear an excerpt of that.
Chairman Carr, yes or no, and please, yes or no, is the SEC an independent agency?
Senator, thanks for that question.
Yes or no is all we need, sir. Yes or no, is it independent?
Well, there's a test for this in the law, in the key portion of that test.
Yes or no, Brendan?
The key portion of that test is.
Okay, I'm going to go to Commissioner Trustee.
So just so you know, Brendan, on your website, it just simply says, man, the FCC is independent.
This isn't a trick question.
Okay.
The FCC is yes or no.
Is it not?
Okay.
Is it not an independent?
Is your website wrong?
Is your website line?
Possibly.
The FCC is not an independent agency.
Okay.
Can I read this to you?
The FCC's mission on the homepage of the FCC, man, an independent U.S.
government agency overseen by Congress.
Is that factual or is that a lie?
The FEC is not formally an independent agency.
Is this a lie?
I can, I'm happy to answer your question.
Okay.
The synchon of independence is being removable by the president.
Chairman, I have a little bit of a time.
I'll get back to you.
The FD is not an independent agency, formally speaking.
Soon after Kars said that the FCC removed the word independent from its website,
Jamil, why are the agencies like the FCC created to be independent?
And how does the politicization of the SEC fit into the broader shift of the role of agencies
under the Trump administration?
Yeah.
Well, so, I mean, I think we're seeing exactly why these kinds of agencies
should be, you know, independent. You know, the alternative is the agencies are partisan and are
suppressing the kind of speech that the president wants them to suppress and answerable in this
very political, immediate political sense to the president. But the Supreme Court is very quickly
making it clear that they don't believe in independent agencies. They believe in a unitary
executive in which the president is essentially the decider for any agency in the executive
branch and that the leaders of those agencies are removable at the whim of the president. That's the
Supreme Court's current view. And I think that, you know, you can trace some of what's going on now
in the FCC to that, you know, that particular vision. But, you know, one thing that I think is
really important, and, you know, we focus a little bit, I think, justifiably on Disney's decision to
push back. But Disney's decision is actually an outlier, right? There's so many of these media
organizations that have not pushed back. And you can blame a lot of this on Brendan Carr and on the
Trump administration. And you should blame a lot of it on Brendan Carr and the Trump administration.
But the other side of it is media organizations have First Amendment rights that to a large extent
they are failing to assert. And, you know, Disney is an exception. I would say the Associated
Press is another exception, but those exceptions are few and far between.
Go ahead, Commissioner Gomez. I think it's important.
to remember why we're an independent agency. When Congress was looking at creating what was our
predecessor, the Federal Radio Commission, it thought about putting it in the executive branch in the
Commerce Department. And it was actually the Commerce Secretary at the time who said that was not a good
idea, that it was dangerous to have the most powerful regulator of the broadcast media,
which at the time was radio, subject to the whims of one person. And that is why Congress created
the then
FRC, then the FCC
as a multi-member,
bipartisan or multi-partisan,
I guess it doesn't have to be bipartisan
agency, so that it would be
an expert agency not subject
to partisan whims, as
Jamil noted.
And what we are seeing today
is exactly what happens
when we are controlled by the whims
of one person.
We'll be back in a minute.
Okay, so today,
We're driving to southern New Jersey.
And heading to a data center.
A couple weeks ago, I read a story in NJ.com.
And it was all about how there's a data center going up in Cumberland County,
the poorest county in New Jersey,
that's receiving some community pushback.
And this immediately got my attention
because data centers are going up all across the country.
I feel like we should be hearing politicians talk more about this,
but we haven't really heard a consensus.
Are data centers really a necessary evil?
Let's find out.
This is technology we've never seen before.
Right.
Experiment.
Right.
We're an experiment down here.
And we're the guinea pigs.
Right.
And where the guinea pigs.
Exactly.
One thing that happens in this country is there's no planning for the future.
Is it benefiting people or is it benefiting the elite and the money that's going into their pockets?
This is not about abstract politics.
It's about people's everyday lives.
That's this week on America Actually.
Hi, Kara here. On my podcast, they spend a lot of time talking to people at the top of their game,
but there's a whole set of stories we don't hear nearly enough about. That's why I want to tell you about a new podcast at the Vox Media Podcast Network.
It's called Ann Mom and is hosted by WNBA star Skyler Diggins and reporter Cassidy Habbard.
The show dives into what it actually looks like for women to perform at the highest levels of their careers,
while also navigating motherhood, something I know a thing or two about. Not polished, not sugar-coated,
and on their own terms.
It's the kind of honest, complicated conversation
we need more of, especially in sports.
The first episode of Anne Mom is out now
with special guest, Sean Johnson.
Check it out on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
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So that when I had them, I thought that was going to be the thing.
Like, I am finally getting the thing that I prayed for and it's going to fulfill me.
And this is everything I want and more.
And it was, but it was also something missing.
I'm Robin Arson, and this is Motherhood, the remix from Project Swagger.
This series is about defining our own versions of motherhood.
I am ringing in a mama.
I adore and admire.
My friend, fellow Peloton instructor, Kirsten Ferguson.
Listen now at Project Swagger.
Let's talk about what else Brendan has on his agenda at the behest of President Trump, clearly.
Paramount's planned acquisition of Warner Brothers is one of the latest mega mergers moving forward under the Trump administration.
Kinsured Gomez, why don't you start?
You recently called for a review of the foreign ownership interests in the deal.
First, explaining the FCC's role in reviewing mergers like Paramount Warner Brothers.
It can go lots of places and go to the FTC, the Justice Department.
Are you concerned the merger won't get adequate review under Carr?
We actually have a limited role in the Warner Brothers transaction because there are no licenses being transferred here.
Normally, like in the next ARTegna merger that we talked about earlier, the FCC approves that transfer of the licenses and it looks at, you know, how does this affect competition and viewpoint diversity, or at least we normally do.
But I call what happens with this administration is there's this thing called the billionaire,
buddy bypass where we actually don't have a rigorous review of any of these transactions and instead
they get approved, not at the commission level, so I don't get to vote on them in the dark of night.
But with regard to Warner Brothers, the only thing we look at is the foreign ownership.
And that is because it will alter CBS's foreign ownership.
In this case, you know, what really concerns me about this, and it is true that the FCC
very often waives the statutory limit on foreign ownership of broadcasts.
stations, what really worries me here is the fact that these are not just, you know, some Italian
company. These are foreign wealth funds controlled by the governments that are not themselves
terribly friendly to the press and to the freedom of speech. And not only that, but Paramount
has requested a waiver of up to 100 percent of indirect ownership. It's a technicality. And we know
that Tencent, which is a Chinese company, which means it's also controlled by the government,
pulled out so that it wouldn't draw too much attention, but has said, you know,
Bloomberg has reported that they're now back in. And if the FCC says, sure, you can be
on to 100 percent by foreign government controlled companies, then what we are doing to our
content is unimaginable. So I did call, I called for it to be very transparent. I called for the DOJ.
We have a thing called Team Telecom, which is the security agency's review of foreign ownership, that the FCC actually takes their recommendations very seriously in how to handle these types of things.
But again, I'm worried this is just going to be another billionaire buddy bypass.
So the FCC approved a $6 billion merger of Tegna and NECTA, which would create the country's largest television broadcaster, a federal judge recently blocked the merger, as NELI noted.
You know, like, give us some more context for the deal, why it happened, what's the consequences, and how it will impact consumers?
Yeah, there's this longstanding rule, I'm sure Commissioner Gomez can explain it in more detail, that no company should own more than 39% of the broadcasters in a given region.
Right. So you're just a regular person, you know, 30 years ago and you get all of your content from broadcast television radio, the same person shouldn't own all of it.
And this, in terms of government regulation, it's pretty good, right? Like, you can say, okay, not.
One person shouldn't own all the media that you're being fed.
There should be competition for viewpoint, for entertainment, whatever.
And so we're going to make sure that there's diversity in what you're getting over the airways.
This is a pretty good rule.
The argument here is that what doesn't matter because Mark Zuckerberg owns everything that you watch anyway,
and you should allow these companies to get even bigger so they can compete.
This is Brendan's argument.
Where I think this fails, that was Brennan's argument.
And so he's allowing Tegna and NextStart to merge, and they're going to own significantly more than 39 percent in almost every region that
counts, like, in some cases, almost all of it.
And maybe you say, well, they have to compete with meta, but they don't actually have the
distribution, right?
What they own is a bunch of local news stations.
And so what you're going to get in all of these places is your local news, the most impactful
news to most Americans will be under control of one company with one allegiance to the president.
And there will be no other competition, because as we all well know, there's not a lot of
competition or money in local news.
So all of these local state governments that are corrupt in the mega era, all these local county governments that are signing corrupt deals to build data centers, they will not have the force of local journalism pushing back on them to inform their communities.
Instead, we're going to get is a bunch of Facebook groups and a bunch of really weird local journalism that advances the interest of the administration.
And I think that is just straightforwardly dangerous.
I'm not sure there's a regulatory approach to that.
Like, it is true that most people open their phone and get all of their content from TikTok and meta.
Sure.
But the idea behind it is sound, is what you're saying, is the idea that one.
Yes, the idea that particularly the operators of your local news stations should be in competition with one another, and that will create better local news.
Even if it should be left out, the Mark Zuckerberg part should be left out of this.
So let's not make them stronger.
Maybe you should tax Mark Zuckerer.
We're going to make him fund a bunch of local news.
Like, there's a lot of other ideas you could have, but the idea that you're going to let these,
two companies, which have clear allegiance to the president, get bigger to compete with Mark Zuckerberg.
Like I said, he's not sophisticated. You roll that up to anyone in America and say, is that going
to work? And I say, no, that's stupid. So let's shift to DEI, one of Brandon's biggest bugaboos
since taking office. Here he is at a news conference. I really enjoy playing these because he's
such a moron following the April Open Commission meeting. He's responding to a question about the
FCC's investigation into Comcast, DEI policies and whether NBC, which is owned by Comcast, could face calls for
early license renewal. And again, I want people to hear what he's saying in a group so you understand
what he's at. We've been very consistent across the board about what we view as invidious forms of
DEI discrimination. As deals have come before the FCC, we have required people to look at their
policies and make sure they don't have what we think is invidious forms of DEI. Look, in ways,
DEI is a tough concept because some people look at DEI and they view it as sort of just traditional
non-discrimination. There's other ways that you can do DEI policies that we view as the opposite
of that, which is actually discrimination. So when you have debates over DEI, you can really be
talking about two different things. When we talk about DEI, we talk about using protected
characteristics, race and gender, to discriminate against people based on that. And so this idea
that we care about in various forms of DEI discrimination isn't new, isn't limited even to the
broadcast segment. We've done it with Verizon's made commitments.
commitments, charter's made commitments. Other broadcasters do it. We're doing it across the board.
Could DEI be interpreted it as actual discrimination and are the FCC probes into companies'
DEI policies within the agencies remit? This doesn't seem to be his job. It's a Trump administration
thing for sure, but it's not his job. Yeah, I mean, it's definitely a Trump administration.
I think this is extremely cynical and dishonest. Nobody who has spent any time paying attention to this
can possibly think that this is a good faith effort to enforce the civil rights laws.
What's really going on is that the administration here and in many other contexts is weaponizing the civil rights laws to achieve the kinds of censorship that we've been talking about.
That's what's going on with universities around the country.
It's what's going on with the law firms too.
You know, the Trump administration imposed these sanctions on law firms that represented people whom Trump sees as political enemies.
And in order to impose those sanctions, they weaponize the civil rights laws.
And the same thing with the university.
They're saying, you know, it's because of universities violation of civil rights laws that
we're canceling hundreds of millions of dollars in grants.
But really, it's just a lever.
You know, it's a lever to get these important knowledge-producing or free speech institutions
to change their editorial decisions, editorial decisions in sort of the broadest sense,
so that universities stop teaching particular classes or stop hiring particular kinds of people
or stop admitting particular kinds of people so that law firm stop representing people who Trump doesn't like.
And so that media organizations stop, you know, platforming Stephen Colbert.
That's what all of this is really about.
I think that the invocation of discrimination here is transparently contextual.
Wait, can I just point out his mention there of Verizon?
Yeah.
That's some of the most dangerous stuff that he's talking about.
I know we're very focused on media companies and free speech and the actual content regulation,
but Verizon killed all of its DEI policies in order to win merger approval to buy Frontier.
T-Mobile killed all of its DEI policies in order to win merger approval to buy Lumos.
Now, these are tiny telecom deals, and I know most people don't care about telecom deals,
and they're all the most boring people in the world.
But this is just naked corruption, right?
These are companies that operate physical plants in the United States, right?
They have big networks.
They have to hire lots of workers.
They're going to send people to your house.
This is where DEI helps, actually, right?
You want a big, diverse workforce to go service your big, diverse customer base across the country.
And we're getting rid of the programs in order to secure it merger approval so we can further financialize our economy and all this.
Like, you can just see how bad it is.
It's not First Amendment maybe in this context, but it's bad.
Right, right.
So I'm going to shift again to another recent area of interest.
The NFL is facing scrutiny from the FCC and the DOJ over its antitrust exemption.
recently said, however, the inquiry may not lead to any action. I'm not sure what he's doing here.
First, Commissioner Gomez, why? And then Nelai or Jamil, why? Like, what is the reasoning?
This is obviously being pushed by Rupert Murdoch and others, other broadcasters are trying to get
it, you know, up on the tech companies. First you, Commissioner Gomez. I think the intent behind
the public notice, I mean, I wasn't part of it, but there is a lot of concern about the health of
local broadcasting. They are losing advertising dollars to streamers.
and they are losing a lot of money when they lose the NFL in their local broadcasts.
So it's trying to understand the market and what levers there are.
And again, I think this one I agree.
I don't know that there's any action the FCC can take other than shining a light on the fact that there is a problem here for the local broadcasters if they lose such an important source of funding.
Right.
I mean, I sort of agree at the same time, I'm like, oh, well, you should have run your business.
is better kind of thing.
Like on some, but local broadcasters are different than a Rupert Murdoch or something else.
Neely or Jamil?
I think this is one of those moments where mega populism kind of runs into reality.
And it's like, oh, that we should use some government power to make sure that we've given sports leagues, this antitrust exemption so they can all bargain collectively.
All these rich owners can bargain collectively and get the best deal from all these streamers and broadcasters.
And actually regular Americans have to pay thousands of dollars to watch every game.
that they're local teams and their local communities that they pay usually huge tax incentives
to build the stadiums for and then even to watch the games.
You're priced out and the tickets are getting more expensive.
There's something to be done there.
But in the context of how car operates, how this DOJ operates, I don't think shaking down the NFL is going to work.
I think you're actually going to run up against a very motivated billionaires.
We're all pretty Republican in posture.
And they're just going to call the president and say, don't you like Tom Brady?
and it's going to go away.
It depends on the billionaires he's talking to.
So let's talk about the endgame.
The FCC regulates broadcast
is becoming increasingly irrelevant,
as Neely has pointed out correctly.
According to Nielsen,
broadcast television accounted
for about 20% of U.S. total viewing,
which is amazing,
with streaming, overtaking both broadcast and cable.
The rules that Carr has resurrected
date back to a time
when broadcast spectrum was scarce
and it was important to have it.
Neal, you've made the case
that Carr wants to get the FD to start regulating the internet.
Earlier you said his actions,
so far,
It was a test balloon for this.
Is there a legitimate argument for doing that since it's primarily how content is distributed today?
I'm smiling because the last time Jamil and I talked was five years ago on the Dakota podcast.
And our debate was whether the tech platforms shield themselves in the First Amendment to avoid all regulation and whether that had gone too far.
And I'm still of the opinion that all government's speech regulations are bad.
And I, you know, I'm a journalist.
I'm allergic to them.
I think that you should have a diversity of viewpoints and voices, and we should all fight it out.
And the challenge to that is the tech platforms algorithmically control all the media that people consume.
And so, you know, I've always joked that Mark Zuckerberg just has a dial in his office.
And he's like, make Instagram more mega.
And then it's more mega.
And we all have to hear the song about wanting a guy who's six, five with blue eyes for a month before the election.
And maybe you believe that that's a conspiracy or maybe you don't.
But there's no transparency into what happened there.
And I really think that this government is putting pressure on a bunch of big tech companies
who are all uniformly turning into defense contractors right now through AI and saying,
hey, make sure people like us.
And the pushback I'd give is maybe it's not working.
Maybe young people actually still hate AI.
I think the Times released a poll as we're speaking that the president's approval rating is lower than it's ever been in his second term.
and the idea that social media is actually providing pushback,
that people are actually seeing what's happening in their lives
and are talking about it and they can overcome these algorithms.
I think you have to be a little too optimistic to believe it, right?
There's still ways for all of that to change.
But that's the dynamic that I'm paying a lot of attention to.
So Commissioner Gros, does that make what you're doing irrelevant?
How do you look at that, even though this is being used as a tool
to deliver us into that future that Nelai is talking about?
No, I think the FCC still plays a very important role. You know, when you see a lot of news on your TikTok feed, that is actually being written by local journalists. So local broadcasters matter very much. And I would also just like to point out that on top of all the issues that we're having with local broadcasting and the health of local broadcasting, we defunded public media. They seem to be surviving, thank goodness. But there are pockets of this country that only get broadcast through public media. There's
no other provider. So that's not good, even during times of disasters. So my point is, there's still an
important rule for the FCC. There's still an important rule for broadcasters. But we do need to be
very cognizant of the fact that we no longer have just three broadcasters. We have media everywhere,
producing content everywhere. And so we need to take that into account as we think about what we do.
I think it's important to have, for example, consumers, viewers, listeners to know when political ads are using AI.
And that's something the FCC, in fact, did propose to do.
Now, that is content regulation, but it's very targeted, very specific.
It's not telling them they can't do it.
It's just saying, you need to have something that says this is generated by AI.
Much like political ads also say, you know, they have that end that says, my name is such and such, and I approve this message.
That's actually an FCC rule.
So I do think there's still an important role.
But we don't regulate streaming.
We don't regulate the Internet.
We regulate cable to a very limited extent.
We do not regulate content, except for maybe a couple things about political advertising.
So, you know, we need to evolve into where we are today technologically and understand that the rules that mattered when there were only three voices that this country listened to have been thrown out the window because of all the,
alternative content people can access. Right. So I just have two more questions. One for Jamil and then one for all of you. President Reagan's repeal of the
Fairness Doctrine in 1987 is credited with helping pave the way for the rise of rush limbo
and the modern partisan media. Now Carr is invoking news distortion as we noted a relic of the
Fairness Doctrine era as a regulatory tool to police broadcaster's speed. Looking ahead to the
midterm elections, Jamil, how could the FCC's policies impact political coverage that the
commissioner was just talking about? Yeah, I mean, I do worry that the FCC's threats to
broadcasters and more broadly the Trump administration's threats that, you know, directed at
all sorts of media organizations will have an effect on not just, you know, what news organizations
cover over the next few months, but how they cover those things as well. And, you know, we,
I mentioned this earlier in this conversation, but, you know, at this point, I'm not even sure
that the Trump administration has to make the threats explicitly in order for media
organization to sort of adapt their editorial decision making to, you know, the perception of what
the Trump administration wants. And I think that's a very dangerous situation. But, but,
Carrick, I don't want to reopen this debate I had with NILA five years ago. But I just want to
point out that they're, you know, they're different. I share NILA's sort of instinctive opposition
to media regulation. But I also think there are different kinds of media regulation. And NILA
itself was defending the 39% rule just, you know, a few minutes ago.
And I think there are all sorts of structural regulation that wouldn't give government officials the ability to intervene at the level of viewpoint or even content, but would be sort of structural regulation that would change, you know, what all of us know about the social media platforms decision making, for example, or would all of us know about how AI models work, or would change diversity of, you know, sort of diversity rules and like how many new sources we have in any particular environment.
And those kinds of structural rules are, I think, worth spending, you know, those are worth, worth thinking more about. And we should, we should be open to those even if we are for good reasons, sort of allergic to the idea of the government deciding, you know, whose voices get heard.
We should set up like a five-member bipartisan commission.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Independent agency.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That would be a great thing.
So Commissioner Gomez, you wrote on X, quote, the days of the FCC as a paper tiger will come to an end.
there's a chance that Carr's probes will amount to nothing and that his reign is ultimately temporary.
He even reflected on his legacy, oh, God, in a recent interview with the Financial Times,
saying, quote, I got my time, I got my shot, I took my shot.
This man needs to stop seeing movies and quoting from him. He just really needs to stop.
But what are the potential lasting consequences of his actions at the FCC besides being an irritant?
And what changes could be permanent? Let's start with you, Commissioner Gomez,
and then Neely and Jameel.
You get the last word.
Well, first of all, I absolutely agree with everything Jamil just said.
The one thing I would like to point out, by the way,
is that the 39% cap is statutory.
It is not an FCC rule,
and it is not for the FCC to let companies violate that.
But that's not what you just asked me.
You know, I really do worry about the effect on the psyche of broadcasters in the long term,
where they will always be more afraid now of the FCC.
and what FCC actions, how they may harm them.
Even Wall Street is looking at these early renewals that the FCC is doing
because it lessens the value of the licenses.
And that, in the end, harms the finances of these local broadcasters.
So I do believe this will come to an end.
I'm glad Disney is suing because if they, or I shouldn't say I'm glad you're suing,
I'm glad it looks like they're going to sue,
because if they do, they will win, and hopefully that'll put an end to what we're seeing.
What you're saying, but the most lasting thing is the psyche and bringing the prices down, that it's not as valuable.
It's already a declining asset.
Neli?
I think it's two things.
One, again, he's such a dummy.
There's stuff he's done that we haven't even talked about that has made the FCC appear more capricious and more poorly run and more useless than ever before.
He issued an order banning all of the routers that weren't made in the United States.
Oh, the routers.
I forgot the rights.
Right, all the Wi-Fi routers.
If you don't make him in the United States, it can't be sold in more.
Well, none of the routers are made in the United States.
And then Netgear and ERO, which is owned by Amazon, magically got waivers.
And there's some process.
I've done some reporting.
Some process occurred.
And some, you know, statements were made by those companies of government that said they
promised to build the routers in the United States in the future.
But that's nothing, right?
Like, nothing actually occurred.
We do not actually protect the safety of Americans from supply chain attacks on the Wi-Fi routers.
We just did some stuff to do something that looked like corruption.
And that for the FCC, that legacy of corruption, that's going to be the,
that's going to be what Brendan leaves behind.
This is a corrupt agency that operates through bribes and kickbacks and does what the president wants.
And Brendan can own that.
And I think he's done it so bluntly and so stupidly that you can just look at it and say that's the legacy.
You don't have to dance through it.
More broadly, and it has come up several times in this conversation from all of us,
the notion of the unitary executive that the president just controls the country and he can just do whatever he wants by hiring and firing these agency officials,
by fulminating about what he wants,
and issuing an executive order
and the agencies are going to do it,
that's going to last for a long time.
And again, I started up by saying this.
I really hope that the next Democrat who comes into power
just goes full tilt at it,
that we don't have this Joe Biden
returned a normalcy style attempt to reset the country,
that we actually see what it looks like
for the other side to run at it this hard
so that both sides understand this is a danger.
And to reset it,
we need to rethink how all these agencies work,
Maybe we need to empower the FCC to make more structural changes to protect speech, to protect the local news.
But fundamentally, what we need to do is restore some independence to the parts of our government that need to think long term and not just for a political gain in the short cycle.
And I hope, optimistically, Brendan running around like a bull in a china shop, spout in movie quotes, whenever he can to Benny Johnson, is going to create the conditions for that change.
Okay. All right, Jamil. That's an excellent argument.
Yeah, I mean, I think that the longer term effect that I'm most concerned about is it has to do with democratic culture. It doesn't have to do with the power of the agency or First Amendment doctrine, which I actually think First Amendment doctrine has held up pretty well in this particular context. The longer term effect that I'm worried about is comes out of the failure of so many media organizations to stand up for their First Amendment rights. And I think that this creates a kind of, it's not a legal precedent.
Like if you don't stand up for your rights, you don't create a legal precedent, but you create a kind of factual precedent that, you know, ABC, for example, had this lawsuit, that Trump filed this lawsuit against ABC over, you know, something that George Stephanopoulos said on the air. He said that, you know, Trump had been found liable for rape when, in fact, Trump had been found liable for sexual assault. And Trump sued ABC for millions of dollars, $16 million or something. And they got a settlement from ABC. And there's no legal decision there. There's no judicial opinion saying that ABC.
violated the First Amendment or that, you know, ABC doesn't have the right to say this particular
thing. But there is this factual precedent of a major media organization handing over
obscene sums of money to the president in response to, I wouldn't say it was a frivolous
lawsuit, but a very weak lawsuit. And then we saw the same thing with, you know, CBS settling a case
with Trump, meta settled a case with Trump. You know, one after another, all of these nominally powerful
media organizations settled these weak or frivolous cases with the president and just turned over
huge sums of money to them. And I really worry about that set of factual precedents and what it's
going to mean the next time government officials try to exercise this kind of power.
Right. That's a really good point. I mean, the companies really ultimately are at fault here.
Yeah, that's why the Disney, let's hope, lawsuit is so important. Yeah, I would agree. Anyway,
this has been really great. I just want to say, I really appreciate it because I think people
should understand what's happening here. And also, Brendan, you're invited. I think you're a moron.
Prove me wrong. You're welcome to come on, as I've said many times for equal time, even though I'm
not bound by that, but I certainly would. And you may not use any movie quotes. I mean, you can,
I guess, free speech, whatever. If you want to look like more of a moron, you could do it.
In any case, I invite you on, but I really appreciate this. And Commissioner Gomez, I appreciate
a lot of what you're doing there as the lonely commissioner. And Neely, of course, has done an amazing job
and Jamil, as the usual. You're all terrific, and I really appreciate it.
Yeah, and I just want to call it. We do a segment on the Vergecast called Brendan Carr's
Dummy every week. We call it America's favorite podcast within a podcast. It is now infected this podcast,
which is very exciting. And our listeners write us theme songs, and we play different theme songs
every week for Brennan Carr's a dummy. So this is one we like so much that we actually bought. It's
by Viola da Gumba. It is a Gregorian chant.
Fantastic. Let's listen to it.
Thank you guys so much. I really appreciate it.
Thanks, Sarah.
Thank you.
Thank you, Carol.
We got a dumb car.
Today's show was produced by Christian Castro Roussel, Michelle Alloy,
Catherine Millsopp, Megan Bernie, and Kaelin Lynch.
Nishat Koura is Vox Media's executive producer of podcasts.
Special thanks to Madeline LaPlante Duby,
Aiman Whalen, and Julia Sharp Levine.
Our engineers are Fernando Aruta and Requan,
and our theme music is by trackademics.
That song you're hearing now is called Dumb Carr.
It was sent to the Vergecast by Billy in Santa Fe.
If you're already following the show, you are not a moron like Brendan Carr.
If not, you are one.
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Thanks for listening to On With Caroushisher from Podium Media, New York Magazine,
the Vox Media Podcast Network, and us.
We'll be back on Monday with more.
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