Viewers (or shall I say, former viewers) and advertisers have been telling them what shouldnt be on the air for years now. Finally starting to listen
Don't recall that, but I'd be totally opposed to that as well. (I'm much more in the center than left FWIW, but that's probably wildly left for many here.)maroon barchetta said:fig96 said:
So many missing the forest for the trees here.
I don't have strong feelings about Kimmel one way or the other, and if ABC wanted to fire him that was their choice (though I thought his comments would have been much more inflammatory given the uproar). But the fact that the FCC chair is talking about wanting to sanction or take away licenses from media companies for things they say should be a massive red flag.
This isn't the first time that this admin has advocated for companies to fire specific employees for saying things they didn't like (again, massive red flag). Getting fired for an opinion that your employer didn't like is very different than getting fired for celebrating someone's death.
Did the "other side" do some of this as well? To an extent, and that was wrong too. But they didn't literally call for people to fired or tell reporters asking about free speech to their face that they might be next. We have media companies sending out memos to their employees telling them not to post negatively about a public figure who died. That's kind of insane.
You should find this alarming whatever side of the aisle you're on, because at some point your party isn't going to be the one in charge.
When the Affordable Care Act was being pushed, the White House had an ad campaign encouraging people to tattle on any friends or neighbors or family members who were sharing info about the ACA that wasn't exactly correct.
The Obama administration literally encouraged people to be Rolf telling on the Von Trapp family.
Never heard one person on the left have a problem with it.
TCTTS said:
Provide examples. Explain.
DannyDuberstein said:TCTTS said:
Provide examples. Explain.
The FCC has governed content, what's allowable at certain times of day, decency standards, etc.
TCTTS said:
Advertisers aren't the United States government.
TCTTS said:DannyDuberstein said:TCTTS said:
Provide examples. Explain.
The FCC has governed content, what's allowable at certain times of day, decency standards, etc.
And yet none of that is remotely in the same ballpark as threatening to revoke a license because it didn't like what a late night host said.
TCTTS said:
Correct. I've made this same distinction about a dozen times now in this thread. Doesn't change the fact that they were threatened by the United States government.
Thank goodness this admin is toning down the rhetoric in an effort to help diffuse things.DannyDuberstein said:TCTTS said:DannyDuberstein said:TCTTS said:
Provide examples. Explain.
The FCC has governed content, what's allowable at certain times of day, decency standards, etc.
And yet none of that is remotely in the same ballpark as threatening to revoke a license because it didn't like what a late night host said.
When it involves the subject of murder and doubling down on some of the hateful crap that has brought us here, it sure as hell is in the ballpark
TCTTS said:
Hateful speech is still free speech.
Equinox said:TCTTS said:
Correct. I've made this same distinction about a dozen times now in this thread. Doesn't change the fact that they were threatened by the United States government.
Were you in the meeting?
TCTTS said:
Hateful speech is still free speech.
TCTTS said:Equinox said:TCTTS said:
Correct. I've made this same distinction about a dozen times now in this thread. Doesn't change the fact that they were threatened by the United States government.
Were you in the meeting?
Good Lord, Carr's words have been posted in this thread multiple times now. Keep up.
DannyDuberstein said:
I'd say some of this hateful rhetoric is inspiring people to pick up rifles. Demonize and Hitler-ize some individuals; don't be surprised when someone decides to slay the demon for what they consider to be the public good
TCTTS said:
So government censorship of speech is allowed as long as they don't censor all speech. Got it.
Equinox said:TCTTS said:
So government censorship of speech is allowed as long as they don't censor all speech. Got it.
Clutch those pearls tighter!
TCTTS said:Equinox said:TCTTS said:
So government censorship of speech is allowed as long as they don't censor all speech. Got it.
Clutch those pearls tighter!
Tell me you have nothing left to say without telling me you have nothing left to say.
fig96 said:I must have missed where the previous admins threatened networks, reporters, and media personalities openly.Kaiser von Wilhelm said:TCTTS said:fig96 said:
So many missing the forest for the trees here.
I don't have strong feelings about Kimmel one way or the other, and if ABC wanted to fire him that was their choice (though I thought his comments would have been much more inflammatory given the uproar). But the fact that the FCC chair is talking about wanting to sanction or take away licenses from media companies for things they say should be a massive red flag.
This isn't the first time that this admin has advocated for companies to fire specific employees for saying things they didn't like (again, massive red flag). Getting fired for an opinion that your employer didn't like is very different than getting fired for celebrating someone's death.
Did the "other side" do some of this as well? To an extent, and that was wrong too. But they didn't literally call for people to fired or tell reporters asking about free speech to their face that they might be next. We have media companies sending out memos to their employees telling them not to post negatively about a public figure who died. That's kind of insane.
You should find this alarming whatever side of the aisle you're on, because at some point your party isn't going to be the one in charge.
I literally don't understand cheering this on, for this reason alone. The tables WILL be turned at some point, and it's only going to get worse from here.
Isn't that what is currently happening? Or did you mean, turning the tables BACK?
Sea Speed said:Honestly seems like they had ABC dead to rights on this. Carr did it the right thing hands down pic.twitter.com/YcBaFpUiqX
— Latinx Adjacent Doctor PhD (@TonerousHyus) September 18, 2025
Sea Speed said:
This is a carbon copy of the conversation around Colberts cancellation. It's wild.
TCTTS said:
In the Obama/Fox scenario other journalists actually asked the hard questions and Fox kept full access, if I recall. And is that worse than Trump actually removing media from the press pool and replacing them with conservative outlets and bloggers? As well as directly threatening reporters in press conferences?YouBet said:fig96 said:I must have missed where the previous admins threatened networks, reporters, and media personalities openly.Kaiser von Wilhelm said:TCTTS said:fig96 said:
So many missing the forest for the trees here.
I don't have strong feelings about Kimmel one way or the other, and if ABC wanted to fire him that was their choice (though I thought his comments would have been much more inflammatory given the uproar). But the fact that the FCC chair is talking about wanting to sanction or take away licenses from media companies for things they say should be a massive red flag.
This isn't the first time that this admin has advocated for companies to fire specific employees for saying things they didn't like (again, massive red flag). Getting fired for an opinion that your employer didn't like is very different than getting fired for celebrating someone's death.
Did the "other side" do some of this as well? To an extent, and that was wrong too. But they didn't literally call for people to fired or tell reporters asking about free speech to their face that they might be next. We have media companies sending out memos to their employees telling them not to post negatively about a public figure who died. That's kind of insane.
You should find this alarming whatever side of the aisle you're on, because at some point your party isn't going to be the one in charge.
I literally don't understand cheering this on, for this reason alone. The tables WILL be turned at some point, and it's only going to get worse from here.
Isn't that what is currently happening? Or did you mean, turning the tables BACK?
Do you mean like when the Obama admin was going to exclude FNC from pool reporting before they had to back down from it?
Or how about the Biden Admin working insidiously behind the scenes with Big Tech to de platform conservative voices and scrub social media of wrong think? That wasn't a threat; it was worse because they were actually running a suppression campaign from the WH.
The Democrats set the precedent here and now they are reaping the whirlwind. This will spiral and we can all look back to the Democrats as almost always the ones taking us down totalitarian paths.
Should the government censor speech it doesn’t like? Of course not.
— Brendan Carr (@BrendanCarrFCC) February 14, 2019
The FCC does not have a roving mandate to police speech in the name of the “public interest.”https://t.co/j4o2lA6LiL