Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Trump’s top media regulator says ‘I don’t think this is the last shoe to drop’ after Jimmy Kimmel’s show suspended – live

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‘I don’t think this is the last shoe to drop,’ Trump’s FCC chair tells Fox

In an interview with Fox News on Thursday, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Brendan Carr, praised the owners of local TV stations that broadcast ABC programming for putting pressure on the network’s owner, Disney, to take Jimmy Kimmel off the air, in response to what Carr called Kimmel’s “distortion” of the news about Charlie Kirk’s murder in a monologue on Monday.

“The key point is these were local TV stations, licensed by the FCC, that have a public interest obligation to serve their local community, they pushed back on Disney,” Carr said, referring to ABC affiliated stations owned and operated by Nexstar and Sinclair that decided to take Kimmel off the air. Those station owner, in Carr’s words, “said ‘We don’t think that this type of programming is responsive to the needs of our viewers in Utah, in Pennsylvania,’ and that’s exactly the way the system is supposed to work.”

We’re going to back to that era when local TV stations, judging the public interest, get to decide what the American people think,” Carr added.

He then suggested that pressure from the FCC on the local license holders had been a factor. “We’re constraining the power… of Disney of Comcast. I think the American public are going to be much better off,” he said. “I don’t think this is the last shoe to drop. This is a massive shift that’s taking place in the media ecosystem the consequences will continue to flow.”

Carr’s mention of Comcast, which owns NBC, might be ominous for the network’s late-night hosts Jimmy Fallow and Seth Meyers, both of whom Donald Trump has called for to be fired over their criticism of him.

In July, Carr wrote to Comcast to announce that he that he had launched an investigation into the company’s relations with its NBC affiliates, after Trump called for the network to be held “accountable” for what he called content favoring the Democratic party.

Key events

Letterman condemns ABC for suspending Kimmel ‘to suck up to an authoritarian criminal administration’

In a live interview with the Atlantic on Thursday, David Letterman called the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel, under pressure from Donald Trump’s FCC, “a misery.”

“In the world of somebody who’s an authoritarian, maybe a dictatorship, sooner or later everyone is going to be touched,” Letterman said.

He added:

“They took care of Colbert – that was rude, that was inexcusable, the man deserves a great deal of credit, he’s in the Hall of Fame nine times, and to be manipulated like that, because the Ellison family didn’t want to trouble Donald Trump with this move, so they got rid of him. Not only got rid of him, got rid of the whole franchise. ‘You’re not going to have to worry about anything, Larry. It’s all gone. It’s fine. Good night.’”

And then my good friend Jimmy Kimmel. You know, I just, I feel bad about this because we all see where this is going, correct? It’s managed media. And it’s no good. It’s silly. It’s ridiculous. And you can’t go around firing somebody because you’re fearful or trying to suck up to an authoritarian criminal administration in the Oval Office. That’s just not how this works.

The editor of the Atlantic pressed Letterman on what Trump’s FCC chair called the “news distortion” in Kimmel’s monologue on Monday, the comedian’s claim that Maga Republicans were “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them.” The suspected gunman, Tyler Robinson, was a gun-owning Utahn, raised in a pro-Trump, Republican family, but evidence made public in charging documents suggests that he killed Kirk because he considered the far-right activist “evil”.

“So what? We all make mistakes, I mean, good Lord,” Letterman replied. “Mistakes are going to be made. Hopefully it will improve. I think, sadly, it’s not going to improve. I’m not exactly in full-mind understanding of what Jimmy said, what he was trying to say, and what mistake was made. This is something that was predicted by our president right after Stephen Colbert. Colbert got walked off. So you’re telling me that this isn’t premeditated at some level?”


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