NHacker Next
login
▲After getting Jimmy Kimmel suspended, FCC chair threatens ABC's The Viewarstechnica.com
132 points by duxup 2 hours ago | 137 comments
Loading comments...
Sparkle-san 2 hours ago [-]
ABC is owned by Disney, which owns many subsidiaries. The one thing they and their shareholders care about is cold, hard cash. If you don't agree with what they're doing, then consider speaking the loudest way you can, with your wallet.

Disney owns:

- Hulu

- Disney+

- ESPN+

- National Geographic

- Pixar

- Marvel

- A whole lot more

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_assets_owned_by_the_Wa...

erulabs 1 hours ago [-]
A lot of things can be true at the same time:

- The FCC shouldn't be involved in content moderation, and the FCC Chair is obviously on an authoritarian power trip.

- What Kimmel said was wrong (assuming you believe Utah state investigators) and deeply irresponsible and inflammatory.

- Clearly the market was already deciding that Kimmel's show is irrelevant (Nielsen ratings quite clear on that).

- The FCC is only involved in content because of how TV broadcasting worked ~50 years ago (large swaths of RF spectrum allocated to certain license holders, only a few channels -could- exist due to technical reasons, thus fairness rules).

- ABC's distributors threatened to stop airing the network, which is what actually caused Disney/ABC to act, it's hard to say what impact the FCC Chairs comments actually had.

- The idea that the FCC needs to act to protect the TV Broadcasting systems is ridiculous, just let it all die, we're very far past the "public square" era of media.

- Had the FCC made no comment, and Disney pulled the show due to the distributors actions, it would have obviously just been "cancel culture but from the right", instead Brendan Carr wants to get in the headlines and so here we are.

It's all a perfect Scissor Statement. You can absolutely not care about Kimmel, you can think the FCC's TV licensing scheme is pointless and outdated, you can be 0% surprised Disney only cares about money and Carr is an idiot, and still you can get into a heated argument about this stuff. My own mother texted me "Free speech is dead" and hurah, now I get to do 3 hours of reading to say "it never really existed in broadcast television and also yes, this is bad, but not nearly as bad as you think" and boom now I'm the fascist.

"Sort by Controversial" is such a troubling timeline.

kelnos 40 minutes ago [-]
> What Kimmel said was wrong (assuming you believe Utah state investigators) and deeply irresponsible and inflammatory.

What Kimmel said[0] was fairly innocuous and not all that big a deal. What he said was actually true, in general, about conservative discourse, regardless of what the shooter's politics are.

Carr directly threatened ABC's broadcast license over protected speech, even in the context of the FCC's mandate and the rules around broadcast licensing.

Kimmel's ratings are irrelevant. Murdering someone with terminal cancer is still murder.

[0] There still seems to be a bunch of confusion and misinformation about what Kimmel said, so: "We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang trying to characterize this kid who killed Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it." If you truly believe that's the kind of thing the FCC should be threatening a network's broadcast license over, I'm not sure it's possible to have a productive discussion with you about this.

thrownawayohman 44 minutes ago [-]
Man you are delusional. How many pols and their elk where clamoring for civil war because a YouTuber got shot that they _assumed_ was a leftist? How many of those same people said anything when a democratic state senator and their spouse was murdered, and another pair seriously wounded?

This is the type of nonsense that really bothers me with this site. It’s an attempt to “both sides” everything in a pathetic attempt at seeming logical.

hakunin 47 minutes ago [-]
> - What Kimmel said was wrong (assuming you believe Utah state investigators) and deeply irresponsible and inflammatory.

I agree that we should be disavowing violence.

The problem is that for 10 years democratic lawmakers and media figures are disavowing violence on both sides, while republican lawmakers and media figures are doing the opposite: stoking the flames, promoting the idea of civil war, telling everyone that the country is stolen from them, that immigrants are out to get them, that democrats are out to get them, etc. According to this rhetoric, democrats are to blame for all of this. When something bad happens and it's not democrats who caused it, they come up with a conspiratorial explanation for how it's still democrats.

So when one side keeps constantly disavowing, and the other side keeps constantly attacking, at some point disavowing becomes literally the wrong thing to do. You can't lay down your weapon while the other person just keeps hitting, and expect the hitting to stop.

What we are being shown repeatedly by republicans is that violent, divisive rhetoric actually leads to electoral victories, and grants free license to become "president for one side only" and do whatever that side wants. If democrats continue to disavow and apologize, they will end up simply extinct. This is why some democrats stopped doing that.

ajross 59 minutes ago [-]
> - What Kimmel said was wrong (assuming you believe Utah state investigators) and deeply irresponsible and inflammatory.

Was it really though? Paraphrased, Kimmel said that the killer was a republican. He had a republican background, but it didn't motivate the killing which didn't seem to have any particular ideology beyond (maybe) trans identity politics and/or edgelord memery. So yeah, that was wrong.

But if that's "irresponsible and inflammatory", then isn't it equally so to blame "democrats" or "the left", also groups with which Robinson has no documented affiliation? And we can all agree that this is happening pervasively on the right, at all levels.

The double standard here seems troublesome to me, and likely deliberate. Which, I'll add, what actually the point Kimmel was trying to make.

> now I get to do 3 hours of reading to say "it never really existed in broadcast television and also yes, this is bad, but not nearly as bad as you think" and boom now I'm the fascist

You're not a fascist, but you do seem to be sort of an apologist. Doesn't the linked article directly refute the "not nearly as bad as you think" bit? It's happening again!

camel_Snake 9 minutes ago [-]
> Paraphrased, Kimmel said that the killer was a republican.

He literally didn't though? Why does this mistake keep being made. Kimmel made 0 assertions about the shooter. He did make assertions about the President and his conduct, however.

erulabs 51 minutes ago [-]
> Was it really though? Paraphrased, Kimmel said that the killer was a republican. He had a republican background, but it didn't motivate the killing which didn't seem to have any particular ideology beyond (maybe) trans identity politics. So yeah, that was wrong.

Look I don't even pretend to know the truth. But the sitting governor of Utah, the highest authority on the investigation (which is being done by Utah state investigators), said the shooter had a "leftest ideology". NYT source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/14/us/kirk-shooting-suspect-...

Now its fine to not believe the governor, but I am not one of the investigators so thats as good as I can get unless I believe in a conspiracy by the state of Utah itself, which I think warrants evidence.

Personally I don't believe in "group X verbed Y", as I do not believe that groups can act. Liberals didn't shoot anyone, conservatives didn't shoot anyone; a single individual person shot someone. Group identity is not interesting to me, nor do I find it helpful. I do find it very inflammatory tho, and think is a deplorable thing to say to uninformed viewers at home.

By "not nearly as bad as you think", what I mean is, the FCC has always policed content on broadcast television. Shows have been cut mid-air due to foul language. We have never had "freedom of speech" on broadcast television. And, if you notice that it's not even clear the FCC took any action, that it was actually ABC's distributors who caused the ruckus, then this is bog-standard "cancel culture", which, while bad, is hardly the death of free speech. I'd be perfectly unbothered if broadcast television died completely, thus reducing the FCCs ability to control the media period.

Yes, I'd love to live in a world with less censorship, less stupidity, less government control, but that's not the world we live in, and its not the world we used to live in, either.

taurath 3 minutes ago [-]
> unless I believe in a conspiracy by the state of Utah itself

What about political incentives? The conservative media sphere was falling over themselves to rush to label the shooter before any evidence or even a statement of "ideology" was given by the Utah gov, such that the WSJ posted and retracted an article about how the shooter was trans. An observation of that was what got Kimmel turned off the air. It wasn't what the Utah gov eventually said, it was all that had taken place before then.

> And, if you notice that it's not even clear the FCC took any action, that it was actually ABC's distributors who caused the ruckus

What if the chair caused the ruckus with the distributors by making public comment and explicitly threatening to pull ABC's status, on a timeline before the distributor made the call? Why is this explicit threat of removal, not just taken against the show, but against the entire network, not considered an action?

ajross 43 minutes ago [-]
> By "not nearly as bad as you think", what I mean is, the FCC has always policed content on broadcast television

For boring stuff like sex and profanity! When was the last time a show was pulled under threat of FCC action because of political speech? Has it ever happened before? And it's happening again, just days after it worked the first time.

Your cynicism, whether it's deliberate or not, is serving you very badly here.

> And, if you notice that it's not even clear the FCC took any action

Good grief. Brendan Carr literally made the threat on camera, in public. That's the way extortion works. You don't have to take the action because the target submits.

erulabs 30 minutes ago [-]
Extortion doesn't count for much if the FCC had no leg to stand on. I would have loved to have seen the fine and the resulting court-case, but unfortunately for everyone ABC pulled the program because of complaints from its broadcasters. We do not (as far as I know), have the ability to know to what extent the FCC Chair's comments mattered at all.

I absolutely agree the FCC is overstepping and that the FCC Chair is doing a bad thing by making such comments, but until the FCC as an organization actually issues a fine or pulls a license, nothing has actually happened. If what I'm saying puts me into some particular camp that you're opposed to, well, the scissor statement worked. And that makes me much more upset than any of this drama.

ajross 24 minutes ago [-]
> Extortion doesn't count for much if the FCC had no leg to stand on.

What on earth are you saying here? It worked. Obviously it "counts", it actually happened! The show was pulled from the air! You're saying that censorship isn't "technically censorship" if in some alternative universe Disney fought back and won? They didn't!

As for your opinion about the reach of the FCC's powers or the risk to broadcasters of regulatory action, clearly Bob Iger's lawyers disagree with you, and I'm going to bet they're rather better at their jobs than median HN commenters.

Edit: I'm going to call it here. The final reply below seems like 100% apoloigsm to me. The argument seems to be that somehow this is all a mistake, that Disney just got the wrong idea and torpedoed their own show by no fault of the government. And we all know that's not what happened. I don't know how to reply, so I won't.

erulabs 18 minutes ago [-]
Do you have any statement from ABC or Disney that they pulled the show due to FCC comments?

Per PBS.org:

> ABC, which has aired “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” since 2003, did not immediately explain why it suspended the show on Wednesday. But its announcement came after both Nexstar and Sinclair said they would stop airing Kimmel’s show on their ABC-affiliated stations.

Until we get any indication that the FCC chair's comments were the source of the cancelation, I maintain that while what Carr said was stupid and bad, and what the FCC mostly does is stupid and bad, and while what Disney mostly does is stupid and bad, that this is not some new form of fascism.

It's clear you think I'm an idiot, so I'm quite sure my words will mean nothing to you, but please, hear this: A megacorporation took an action that has caused you to have strong animosity towards a fellow citizen based on perceived but not actual happenings. Resist the urge to be pissed off. I will happily march with you when and if the federal government actually attacks freedom of speech.

thrownawayohman 13 minutes ago [-]
I don’t know why I can’t reply to the OPs original comment but it’s obvious that the person you’re replying with is either arguing in bad faith or just being obtuse.
gtirloni 2 hours ago [-]
I'm not a US citizen so take what I write below with a grain of salt.

I always thought the US to be a stronghold of democracy and free speech. I know, it's a naive view and we know how huge companies and corrupt politicians can subvert the system. But still, I thought it had a decent law system that, although imperfect like any other system, kept things from going back to the dark ages.

I don't believe that anymore after what I've seen this year. A few individuals can completely takeover the government, keep committing bigger and bigger crimes and nothing happens. All they get is outrage on social media, which they are happy to shrug off.

I know democracy and free speech are fragile things and we have to be constantly watching but I didn't imagine it would be this ephemeral in the US.

taurath 58 minutes ago [-]
> I always thought the US to be a stronghold of democracy and free speech.

Every single story and moral guidance I've ever been told from childhood, whether from movies, books, church, or culture in general is that people like those in power right now are the bad guys.

I no longer have any idea what people on the other side actually think. I don't think they know anymore either. I think they just want to exert power and control and revenge over their personal grievances and boogeymen, and seem to be under a constant bombardment of ideology to convince people to untether themselves from any moral restraint or connection with the out-group.

I am one of the scary minorities they use as a boogeyman, and their rhetoric about the group of people I belong to is so unattached from my daily life, the values that I hold, and my own attitudes that it would be comical if it didn't come out in sideways glances, scowls, and stares of people on the street. Nobody ever even bothers to ask, to even have a moment of conversation to see that there is a real person. I try to walk through life friendly, open, and interested in people. We walk around with conceptions of other people built for us, not ones that we have made ourselves.

The only thing that seems to help is to try to be offline as much as possible, to be in community with people and in real space.

jpk 1 hours ago [-]
> A few individuals can completely takeover the government

That's not what's happening.

When most people serving in positions of government do so in good faith, most forms of government work, including the American one. When most people serve in bad faith, most forms of government do not work, including the American one.

The American system has checks in place to keep what is happening from happening, but those checks aren't working because those who would exercise them aren't doing so, as withholding those checks benefits them personally, at least in the short term. The underlying theory of the American system is that if you distribute power enough, one or a few bad actors can't seize total power.

But, there are just too many people in elected office right now who did not take their oath to uphold the Constitution in good faith. Namely, in Congress which has simultaneously demonstrated that it is unwilling to effectively wield the impeachment check, and is unable to do effective legislative work, leading to a latent desire for a stronger executive. In this circumstance, no form of government will hold up without a correction towards replacing all the bad-faith actors.

labrador 1 hours ago [-]
It's been worse before in America and we've returned to normal, so I have hope as an American. See McCarthyism in the 1950's, when people like Kimmel were blackballed from working:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism

luddit3 1 hours ago [-]
Maybe before social media. I have a hard time seeing how this country will self-correct.
martythemaniak 1 hours ago [-]
What's really pathetic about the current situation is that McCarthyism was at least rooted in the fear that Soviets would bomb and kill people, which given Russia's conduct in Ukraine and other places was well-founded. The current authoritarian backsliding is because... woke? Truly the dumbest of timelines.
lupusreal 1 hours ago [-]
It helps to understand what "woke" is. I've asked around and the general consensus seems to be "It's called being a decent fucking human being." The problem with that is different people have different values and therefore different interpretations of what it means to be decent, but nonetheless, if you disagree then you're a fascist. And if you're a fascist, then it's okay to punch you. In fact, if you're a fascist then it's okay to murder you, half the very-online nuts on social media will celebrate when you get murdered and say you had it coming.

I think this is why some people are concerned.

rebolek 36 minutes ago [-]
I don’t think it works that way for most people, maybe for some radicals but there are radicals on every side. Yesterday I overheard a conversation where a man was talking about a trip to our capital (in EU country) and how there were "strangepeople" (I wrote it together as it’s an insult as one word here and he meant it that way), wearing pink and rainbow and he was frightened and how’s he glad he returned to our small city in the middle of nowhere.

Did I thought he was a fascist and did I want to kill him? No, he seemed like a decent man who’s just afraid of things he’s not familiar with and who believe in stuff pushed by crazy radicals because he has no experience with people and situations unknown to him.

Did I want to punch him? No, I wanted to discuss with him, but I haven’t got time, as I needed to pick up my kid from the same art school he was bringing his kid in.

So tell me, why is he concerned about people who he saw on metro and who were not threatening him? Should he be afraid of me, because I probably could be described as woke as I think that you should let others be, if they don’t hurt you or others? I don’t care about online media, this is real life example.

mallowdram 1 hours ago [-]
It means meaning has collapsed, and it collapses because our meanings come in word-form, and those are arbitrary. We can make them mean whatever we want them to mean, and then keep saying them. That's what's going on.
hobs 56 minutes ago [-]
That would be called concern trolling where I am from. This idea that "woke" has somehow threatened people is an amusing but rings more hollow every day.

Right wing authoritarianism is by far the biggest terrorist threat in the united states - right wingers literally threaten war on social media on the regular and love their guns, elected officials are literally conspiracy theorists who talk about jewish space lasers and weather control systems, women have lost the right to abortions, we are testing the waters on gay marriage and mixed race marriage, we started a global trade war, the courts, congress, and the executive branch are controlled by one party and no one is doing any balance of powers.

This all happens and I still hear people talk to me like "the liberals just shouldn't say X on twitter because its rude!!!" as if that's going to stop the white nationalists currently on the rampage in the government.

spicyusername 2 hours ago [-]
It's something that's been eroding for a long time, starting mostly with the Reagan administration in the 1980s and the political desire at the time to put an end to the New deal era style of big government from the 1930s and 40s.

There have been periods of pause, and even reverse, but two terms of the Trump administration trailing on the heels of the tea party movement in the 2010s have really done a lot of damage at all levels of US government.

By now, so many politicians, lawyers, and judges, are compromised it's going to take some pretty extreme changes to the way people are voting to make an impact.

I don't see that happening in the near future, even if I do see it happening in the long term.

vmg12 1 hours ago [-]
This is twisting history and reality, big government is exactly what's happening right now. The FCC abusing its power to silence speech is big government. The government using its power over universities to control them is big government. This is the fruit of that tree.
IncreasePosts 1 hours ago [-]
What you have here has nothing to do with the law, and has to do with power. Disney willingly pulled Kimmel off their own networks, because a major distributor of their content(Sinclair) threatened to not air it, which accounts for about 20% of the viewership of the show.
gtirloni 1 hours ago [-]
Why did Sinclair threaten to not air it?
jrs235 58 minutes ago [-]
Because Sinclair needs the FCC to approve a merger for them. They read between the lines and know that to get it approved they need to apply pressure on ABC to can Kimmel to appease someone.

I wish the law that restricted the number of public stations/licenses a single entity could own was still in place. It was created to prevent what's happening now, silencing of varied and different ideas, views, and opinions.

torton 1 hours ago [-]
"In recent months, both broadcasters have announced their intent to buy or sell local TV assets — Nexstar is in the process of effectuating a $6 billion merger with peer broadcaster TEGNA, and Sinclair is executing on a mixture of station acquisitions and sales — all of which require the approval of the FCC."

https://thedesk.net/2025/09/nexstar-sinclair-jimmy-kimmel-fc...

lupusreal 1 hours ago [-]
Maybe they were coerced by the government. Or maybe they canceled Kimmel for the same reason the Trump administration was pissing themselves over Kimmel, because Trump and Sinclair are politically aligned and therefore inclined to act in similar ways anyway...

> Sinclair's stations have been known for featuring news content and programming that promote conservative political positions. They have been involved in various controversies surrounding politically motivated programming decisions,[172][173] such as news coverage and specials during the lead-ups to elections that were in support of the Republican Party.[174][175][172]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinclair_Broadcast_Group#Polit...

My read is they weren't coerced, but did as Trump desired because they like Trump. Either way, it should go to court.

jalapenod 1 hours ago [-]
[dead]
modzu 1 hours ago [-]
since the 1970s democratic backsliding is the primary origin story for todays authoritarian regimes. look at turkey, russia, the philippines, venezuela, nicaragua, poland, hungary, india... theres a playbook. you can now add usa to that list. a good counter example is what happened last year in South Korea. the president declares martial law out of nowhere but before he could consolidate power the courts and the people resisted (not easily mind you, he had significant support) but the checks and balances held things together. but in the other examples you can see how when one of those checks fails it essily cascades into a chain reaction that can be hard to stop. that's what you're witnessing in the usa: taking congressional power to the executive, control of the courts, control of the media, using the national guard domestically to control dissent. well you get the idea. it already seems too late. there won't be some red line crossed where people get out their guns to defend their "freedom" if they haven't already noticed how eroded its become. theres still voting -- just like in all those countries above.
jauntywundrkind 1 hours ago [-]
There's supposed to be checks & balances, of Congress, the courts, and the President keeping one another in check.

But the GOP holds all three. Even the court system has fallen apart, with the Supreme Court using shadow dockets with no explanation, not establishing any precedent, just overriding lower courts to rule by fiat as they please. The GOP congress is utterly maga whipped, with only very rare signs of protest; deathly afraid of provoking Trump's ire.

Even still there's constant legal losses for the administration. But the shock and awe, the endless acting bad, in bad faith, doing bad things, and disrespecting the constitution, the liberties, the democracy: it's very grinding and very hard to see such pure malice against our history and rights and decency performed so ruthlessly so regularly.

mensetmanusman 1 hours ago [-]
The current controversy is related to how to protect free speech.

A man was assassinated holding a mic practicing free speech. Celebrating the assassination can be interpreted as a form of celebrating attacks on free speech, because the murdered mic holder was saying average political views.

Therefore people argue that we have to shame (not imprison or kill) celebrations on attacks on free speech to protect free speech.

ownlife 1 hours ago [-]
Did Jimmy Kimmel celebrate the assassination? (He did not.)
kanbara 1 hours ago [-]
the man’s speech was against human rights for black people, women, lgbtq+. people are allowed to have free speech against those beliefs too. they are not “average”.
krapp 1 hours ago [-]
>Therefore people argue that we have to shame (not imprison or kill) celebrations on attacks on free speech to protect free speech.

So what you're saying is "freedom of speech doesn't mean freedom from consequences?"

Odd. I suspect the same people arguing that now would have been outraged at the very thought before Charlie Kirk's death. Because they celebrate the death of people also practicing free speech all the time while insisting that freedom of speech exists to defend the speech you disagree with, not the speech you agree with.

It's just weird how fast their principles turn on a dime when it's one of theirs.

danielvaughn 1 hours ago [-]
We're still a stronghold of democracy and free speech. That doesn't mean threats don't occasionally present themselves. In fact, it should be welcomed, as it gives each new generation the opportunity to re-affirm their commitment to free speech.

Free speech has been under threat at the academic and cultural level for a while now, especially in the 2010's. All of that was a good thing in my opinion, because a generation of college students were able to see firsthand what happens when we try and silence dissent.

This situation is admittedly more dangerous, as the federal government is attempting to suppress speech via governmental subsidies (as far as I can tell, I don't have all the facts).

But this is also an opportunity. It's a moment for those on the political left to see clearly why protecting speech is, in fact, a very good thing. So hopefully the sane people on both sides of the aisle can reflect on where we're at, how we got here, and how we get out of this situation. To me it's clear - we reject both explicit and implicit attempts to suppress speech we don't like, full stop. We don't kill people, we don't get people fired, we don't threaten to withhold funding. We need to collectively agree to do this across the board, for everyone in this country.

browningstreet 1 hours ago [-]
This feels like a principled, fantasy response. We're not at the "shaking fists on podiums" stage of this issue.
danielvaughn 1 hours ago [-]
I don't know how to interpret "shaking fists on podiums", but it reads as "we're not at the stage where we talk these things out". The only other option is violence, so if you're saying that then say it directly.
etchalon 1 hours ago [-]
The only "free speech" that matters is whether the government is punishing you for it.
somethoughts 58 minutes ago [-]
It feels a better strategy for all parties involved to have transitioned these shows to ABC's streaming properties (i.e. Hulu) and made them "exclusive" content for these platforms.

This would have put them out of the reach of the FCC (based on the FCC's initial spectrum is for public benefit for all claim) for now.

There is probably significant IP in both of these shows that could still have been monetized given brand familiarity. It would have been less than before but still something is better than nothing.

I don't have any data to back this up but I can't imagine a lot of people still use Over The Air TV. And the intersection of people who rely solely on OTA TV and are clamoring to watch Kimmel/View is probably even lower.

This also would probably have benefitted the administration in that it wouldn't have trigger as many alarm bells from a free speech perspective.

xyzelement 1 hours ago [-]
I love my liberal principles but this is totally expected.

Ideally we live in a world where Kimmel isn't canceled but neither is someone like Roseanne Barr. But that world hasn't existed for a while.

In a prisoners dilemma both sides win by cooperation. Once a side "defects" - the other side is a sucker not to. The ship on lamenting this stuff has sailed.

pm90 1 hours ago [-]
Barr wasn’t cancelled by threats from the Government.
IncreasePosts 1 hours ago [-]
Neither was Kimmel - the real threats came from the ABC affiliates who threatened to not air his content.
etchalon 1 hours ago [-]
Kimmel was canceled explicitly because of a threat by the government. Carr has made that clear.
2OEH8eoCRo0 1 hours ago [-]
Why are people playing dumb and ignoring this detail?
IncreasePosts 1 hours ago [-]
Carr spoke about a potential investigation by the FCC on a podcast and the affiliates and Disney bowed to that.
xyzelement 1 hours ago [-]
That's a nuance without consequence. Barr is a random example that came to mind.

The larger point is that it's been very difficult for a while to be a conservative in media, or academia or in the workplace, due to the ease with which you were canceled. The reason people stick with principles because it helps them and the other side - it's a high ground maneuver.

But once you feel like you are consistently deprived of all the benefits of that principle, you are no longer inclined to uphold it.

So in general I would expect conservatives to now attack via pathways they were previously above. The fact that people are surprised they are getting fired for celebrating Kirk's murder is one sign of how benign the conservatives had been about that stuff. I think that's over now.

HankStallone 41 minutes ago [-]
There's also a false equivalence, because when the government is on the same team as all the big tech and media companies, it doesn't have to threaten anyone into silencing speech the team doesn't like. It just happens, and then everyone pretends it's organic.

I'd be glad to have a free speech conversation about this with anyone who actually cares about free speech, but that doesn't include anyone who spent the last decade cheering every time someone they disagreed with got his livelihood taken away. One TV network dumping one "comedian" who was well past his sell-by date is a tiny, tiny counter-trend to what's been going on for years.

hobs 54 minutes ago [-]
Absolutely not, I will not concede this point at all. People deciding you are intolerable is not the same as the government putting pressure on your employer.
xyzelement 46 minutes ago [-]
You don't have to conceded anything. You think conservatives can't point to examples of the government squeezing them, under the guise of COVID stuff, DEI requirements and the like? Or they don't think there was pressure from the government to shape the news?

I want to agree with you, I am just saying it doesn't matter what you and I agree on. Conservatives have clearly seen and felt the principles not applying to their benefits and they are over it. Whether you or I can agonize about a particular misapplication of a particular principle doesn't matter.

31 minutes ago [-]
yread 1 hours ago [-]
Who was the president when Barr's show was cancelled in 2018? Some woke guy?
whalesalad 1 hours ago [-]
Jimmy Kimmel being "cancelled" has nothing to do with Jimmy. He is the canary in the coal mine. The real issue is that the federal government is using their power and might to withhold FCC licensing from groups that they do not agree with. The FCC->ABC situation is what is alarming, has nothing to do with Jimmy.

Same shit happened with CBS/Paramount.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07JQr5W3970

jauntywundrkind 1 hours ago [-]
The government didn't step in to threaten ABC over Barr spouting off derogatory racist trash. They weren't jawboned into doing it. They just didn't want to be associated with a trash person.
taurath 1 hours ago [-]
I don't have any idea where this will go, but the idea that our collective future is determined by the restraint of the people currently in power does not bode well.
dralley 2 hours ago [-]
While I don't much care for either Kimmel nor The View - this is ridiculously corrupt, authoritarian, thuggish, illegal and arrogant behavior and cannot be allowed to stand.

And shame on Disney for caving. Cowards who kneel down to kiss the ring in the face of blatantly illegal threats are not worthy of a position of public trust. And over a merger no less.

I can't think of a better moral justification to prevent a corporation from owning a bigger slice of the ecosystem than to know that said corporation will dispense of any and all integrity they may yet possess to do it.

mensetmanusman 1 hours ago [-]
An issue was that the right was being canceled for views not even 5 years ago and the same people complaining about Kimmel are having their exact quotes replayed justifying those types of cancellations.

From a game theoretic standpoint, tit for tat is exactly what’s supposed to happen to stabilize the situation. This has actually been proven by mathematicians that apply decision making theories to social structures.

sylens 1 hours ago [-]
You're conflating cancel culture, done voluntarily by private companies, with censorship, with the federal government through the FCC is dictating the outcomes of mergers and acquisitions based on compliance with speech restrictions.
christophilus 1 hours ago [-]
The Biden administration had (and used) the ability to demote conservative news outlets on Facebook and Twitter. This cancel culture— both from the right and left— sucks and should be fought.
danielvaughn 1 hours ago [-]
This isn't entirely true, as cancel culture was also prominent at public universities.
mrbombastic 1 hours ago [-]
See if you can spot the difference. And i am not defending past cancellations, but there is a not so subtle difference in kind here that makes these kind of both sides arguments fall flat.
kg 1 hours ago [-]
The right was cancelled by the US government?
HankStallone 1 hours ago [-]
Yes, much of the anger is coming from the petard-hoisting nature of this, and people who spent 2017-2024 trying to silence (or worse) everyone who disagreed with them and cheering on governments that tried to suppress "disinformation" and other speech they didn't like, having to come up with elaborate justifications why It's Different This Time.
vjvjvjvjghv 1 hours ago [-]
I think cancelling The View is overall a benefit to humanity.

But the real question is: Are they going after Fox News, OANN now too? Plenty of biased shows there.

cyberax 2 hours ago [-]
2021: government asking Twitter to tell you that you're not a horse is an unconstitutional violation of free speech.

2025: it's doubleplusgood to threaten TV channels for wrongthink.

g42gregory 1 hours ago [-]
People are discovering that cancel culture goes both ways.

Neither one is good.

But let's not pretend that cancel culture has not been going for many years now.

Remember Fox News cancelling, their most popular at the time, Tucker Carlson Show?

vjvjvjvjghv 1 hours ago [-]
I think the problem is that the FCC is getting involved here.
g42gregory 53 minutes ago [-]
Yes, they could have spent time, first creating an informal "communication safety" group between some Government agency and Disney/ABC. But I feel like this is splitting hairs.
hobs 48 minutes ago [-]
I do remember that, and it turns out there's so many reasons to have fired TC that people had pages of listicles on why he could have been fired https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politic... and none of them were cancel culture it turns out. Fox already lied and paid out hundreds of millions on dominion, it couldn't handle paying for any more lies.
g42gregory 28 minutes ago [-]
Yeah, I am sure soon we be given good reasons why "they couldn't handle" JK either. Just scroll down the comments. See, ABC affiliates wanted him gone... :-)

TC has now an audience larger than the entire Fox News. Maybe JK will do the same.

vmg12 2 hours ago [-]
It actually sickens me how many people that supposedly cared about liberty just completely switched their schtick overnight. I'm not surprised that some of these people were two faced liars, I'm just surprised by the sheer scale and the shamelessness of it. It's like I'm living in a world surrounded by aliens.
etchalon 1 hours ago [-]
It's neat to learn who had actual principles and who was just borrowing some because they were upset they couldn't use the N word.
blooalien 1 hours ago [-]
> "It's like I'm living in a world surrounded by aliens."

...

thefourthchime 2 hours ago [-]
The actual quote from the FCC chair:

"When you look at these other TV shows, what's interesting is the FCC does have a rule called the Equal Opportunity Rule, which means, for instance, if you're in the run-up to an election and you have one partisan elected official on, you have to give equal time, equal opportunity, to the opposing partisan politician,"

This is classic Trump era politics. Bully people with a tangential connection to a obscure law. That way it has an air of legality. Well it meanders through the courts. In the end it doesn't matter if it gets ruled down or not. This gives you time to be rule as a de facto authoritarian.

aeon_ai 2 hours ago [-]
We need a third party, because this is just the pendulum swinging away from one cancel culture to another.
luddit3 1 hours ago [-]
This is not cancel culture. It is a violation of the First Amendment.
1 hours ago [-]
b0sk 1 hours ago [-]
Don't be naive. There was no jawboning from the previous administration to networks to cancel someone -- especially someone who always made fun of the President.

However, this is a a classic example of violation of 1A. (I agree that the thing that was probably in the grey area was they asked Twitter to remove certain COVID-19 medical disinformation tweets -- But, come on, many people were consuming horse dewormers for COVID and dying. )

The right's cancel culture is a violation of constitution because it's the government that's doing the cancelling.

biophysboy 1 hours ago [-]
Beyond the obvious state censorship issues here, its worth noting that Kimmel's monologue on Sep 15 appeared before add'l evidence (texts, discord chats) came out about Tyler Robinson's incoherent beliefs. This means that Kimmel's implied accusation (Tyler was MAGA) was a real possibility at the time, rather than willful misinformation.
convolvatron 1 hours ago [-]
I took his statement to be deeper than MAGA vs liberal.

Regardless of the spin, the view that political opponents are existential risks to the republic and thus demand to be killed for the good of all of is what he was suggesting that is shared.

biophysboy 58 minutes ago [-]
Yes, this is more or less how I read the statement, but I can see why others had a less charitable reading. I don't want to nitpick it too much, because its a pretextual charge during a tense moment.
ajross 2 hours ago [-]
This is the way shakedowns work. Disney backed down on Kimmel because he's "just a comedian" or it's "just one show" or he was "failing anyway". So now they're marks. It's always easy to squeeze a mark for a second time than to shake down a fresh one.

The View is "soft news", it's a "minor talk show", it's "daytime TV". It's not like they're coming after This Week or World News Tonight. Right?

mlinhares 2 hours ago [-]
Just shows that they want to cave, they’re not being forced, they can fight and win but they want to be threatened and cave. If we get out of this mess I hope these people are also made responsible for the outcomes as enablers.
jmclnx 2 hours ago [-]
Off to the USSR we go unless Congress gets brave. Sadly I told people who came here from the USSR where I use to work 40 years ago we were heading towards being the USSR, but a bit different.

They said "no way", well here we are, well on our way. Just a different flavor of the same type of thing.

repeekad 2 hours ago [-]
I get multiple news notifications within minutes of all these things, that’s pretty different than unfettered authoritarianism where people don’t even know it’s happening.

If everyone is aware of what’s going on and we still elect these people, that’s more on us than them no?

labrador 2 hours ago [-]
I served in the Navy 40 years ago on a nuclear submarine opposed to the Soviet Union so I had an interest in learning about our enemy. People like Stephen Kotkin have said Stalin and those around him were true believers in communism, while the situation in America feels like early Putinism, which was about money and power. But the suppression of those critical of the regime is the same.
zzzeek 2 hours ago [-]
it would help if the billionaire / centimillionaire classes decided they didn't like what was going on.
zidad 2 hours ago [-]
who do you think is orchestrating this?
zzzeek 23 minutes ago [-]
the voters? who get their information from....media conglomerates, which are controlled by....you guessed it
clipsy 2 hours ago [-]
It’d be hectomillionaire, unless you’re referring to people with $10k.
pfannkuchen 1 hours ago [-]
Picomillionaires rise up!
nielsbot 1 hours ago [-]
The Kimmel case is a straightforward protection racket.

Nexstar, the owner of 39% of the local TV stations in the country, wants the FCC to change their rules to allow them to merge with [other conglomerate name I forget] to increase their local market ownership share to 80%.

(If you listen to what Kimmel said, he mainly mocked Trump.)

josefritzishere 2 hours ago [-]
This is not normal.
r0ckarong 2 hours ago [-]
It is under fascism.
sghiassy 1 hours ago [-]
Historically speaking it might sadly be :/
reaperducer 1 hours ago [-]
It's sad that the head of the FCC is ignorant of what the FCC does.

The Fairness doctrine was eliminated in the late 80's by Republicans whose talk shows were taking over AM radio.

Later, the FCC took the position that it does not have the authority to regulate content. Only technical things like frequency allocation.

Now, suddenly the Republicans want to invoke the rules they killed because someone got their feelings hurt?

Man up, GOP.

Maybe turn off the TV and read a book, or go for a walk, or take up a hobby other than being angry at everything.

hairofadog 2 hours ago [-]
Back in 2022, when Musk was buying Twitter and the Biden administration was asking social media companies to moderate potentially harmful medical misinformation, it felt like every third comment here was someone hollering about free-speech absolutism. Where did all those people go?
HankStallone 1 hours ago [-]
It's different when they do it.
thrownawayohman 2 hours ago [-]
Lots of right wing people on this platform, evident by the heavy hand moderation if you go against the common grievance of the day.

Which I mean I guess makes sense. Any place that is so feverish about crypto, ai, newFad2.0, or is super into #factsNotFeelinfg always seems like it attracts the same crowd

squigz 2 hours ago [-]
I'm sure there's some Republicans on HN. I'm curious why/if you think that, if the public pressuring companies to fire people for some things (what some people call "cancelling") is wrong, it's somehow more appropriate for the government to do it? Or is this just a matter of, "well, they did it for years, now it's our turn" for you?

(If you don't actually support this party, consider refraining from sharing your opinions of why Republicans support this. And for what it's worth, I don't think the downvotes for those actually sharing their opinions [in a productive way] are deserved, even if I disagree with them.)

Y'all really need to read the guidelines

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

jcranmer 1 hours ago [-]
There are actually quite a few Republicans, such as Karl Rove, who are irate at the current administration for its attacks on free speech.

But broadly speaking, and this truly transcends partisan divisions, there are very many people whose commitment to free speech only extends insofar as they like the speech being protected. It is actually quite rare to find somebody who will advocate "I think the speech you are saying is reprehensible, but I will stake my life on defending the right for you to say it."

bad_haircut72 1 hours ago [-]
All attempts to justify it logically are in vain, deep down lots of people just want to smash the "others" - the lies are like a depth-first search for the shortest path to finding a point where they can finally just drop all pretense.
christophilus 1 hours ago [-]
Most republicans I know despised Kimmel but think the government overstepped. I’m not a Republican, but I am conservative. I think these moves are inexcusable.
Retinal7467 2 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
gjsman-1000 2 hours ago [-]
Simple. The Republicans remember when they were cancelled for not wanting to take a vaccination that was just invented months earlier; when they were deplatformed from Twitter constantly; when Reddit rejoiced at the death of one of their heroes; when "right wing violence is more common" became a meme as Minneapolis was literally burning. They watched a kid who they believed had a legitimate self-defense case get thrown the book in Wisconsin by a prosecutor called out by even the judge for brazen unfairness; with unprecedented levels of online hate rather than openness to discussion. They watched CNN accuse right wingers of exaggerating "mostly peaceful" protests with a car literally burning in the background. They stopped caring about your feelings, because you didn't care about theirs.
Jtsummers 1 hours ago [-]
> They stopped caring about your feelings, because you didn't care about theirs.

Free speech is not about feelings. It's a principle, one enshrined in the US Constitution. If you don't believe in free speech, just say it. Say you don't want free speech, free assembly, free religion, and the free press. Don't cry about hurt feelings, though. That's what children do.

gjsman-1000 1 hours ago [-]
They stood for free speech; but judging by the downvotes here, the left didn't care about their free speech. If it did, my post above wouldn't be at -4, while the inflammatory answer above is still in the black.

The left instead rationalized it under "free speech is not freedom from consequences", called them Nazis, fascists, bigots, homophobes, misogynists, you'd need a thesaurus. Every slur in the thesaurus, they used. When your opponent plays dirty, actively seeks to get you fired from your job, and your figureheads get killed (Kirk) or nearly killed (Trump), why uphold the rules?

EDIT: > Admit that your position is an unprincipled one and based on feelings rather than thought.

Admit that the right has realized that neither side gives a damn about principles; but the left has no right to claim to be principled after 2020.

Jtsummers 1 hours ago [-]
You seem to be done editing this finally, so I'll quote (in case you edit it again) and responde:

> When your opponent plays dirty, when your figureheads get killed or nearly killed, why uphold the rules?

The Constitution wasn't shredded after Lincoln's assassination, Kennedy's, the attempt on Reagan. Why shred it now? You either believe in the principles, or you do not. If you don't, just admit it instead of complaining about hurt feelings or people playing dirty. Be an adult.

Damn, you managed to edit it while I was typing that, but the irony in this is rich:

> actively seeks to get you fired from your job

The Vice President of the United States is calling for people to be fired for speech. Again, you either believe in the freedom of speech or you don't. It's very clear that you do not. So again, be an adult. Admit that your position is an unprincipled one and based on feelings rather than thought.

EDIT: Removed "or Roosevelt" from attempted assassinations, he was the former president, not the sitting president, at the time.

1 hours ago [-]
monkey_monkey 1 hours ago [-]
> If it did, my post above wouldn't be at -4, while the inflammatory answer above is still in the black.

Ah ok, so only your right to free speech is important and no one is allowed to react negatively to it and have their own free speech. Thanks for making that clear.

etchalon 1 hours ago [-]
This basically sums it up.

The right was upset that free speech worked both ways.

They are now enforcing that grievance with government power.

squigz 1 hours ago [-]
> while the inflammatory answer above is still in the black.

Which answer are you referring to?

squigz 1 hours ago [-]
I don't know though, maybe going from downvotes to making assumptions about something like 50m people is a bit of a stretch? And for what it's worth, I upvoted it, and I would certainly fall under "the left"
Retinal7467 1 hours ago [-]
Which legal framework did the Biden admin use to censor twitter or reddit? None? oh yeah because freedom of speech was never about freedom from being called an idiot for being an idiot, it was freedom from the government using the law against you. For all the bleating about how sacred your constitution is, it seems as if you either haven't read it or only care about it when you want to protect your fragile masculinity.
gjsman-1000 1 hours ago [-]
Correct. He didn't use a legal framework, and did it anyway. They even convinced Twitter to ban retweeting an unfavorable New York Post article that turned out true!

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/mark-zuckerbe...

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/zuckerberg-says-the-wh...

https://docs.house.gov/meetings/GO/GO02/20220914/115106/HHRG...

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/oct/14/facebook-...

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-54552101

Retinal7467 1 hours ago [-]
Not a single one of these articles supports the claim that the Biden administration used the law to make speech illegal in the same manner that trump used the fcc to make speech illegal. It doesn’t surprise me that you can’t read though. This is typical of the American education system.
phkahler 1 hours ago [-]
I don't think Republicans characterize it that way. I find myself right leaning, and while I like most of Trumps agenda, I often disagree with his tactics. I increasingly have to fact check stuff like this to see if he crossed a line. The problem is there's too much BS, summarizing, and mischaracterising going on. Direct quotes (sometimes requiring context) are needed to get to the bottom of things. It's exhausting. I will say, right or wrong the left brought this on - it is a response to their bad behavior.
monkey_monkey 1 hours ago [-]
> right or wrong the left brought this on - it is a response to their bad behavior.

jesus fucking wept.

gjsman-1000 1 hours ago [-]
Please avoid Christophobic language. Thanks.
thrownawayohman 46 minutes ago [-]
lol what?
monkey_monkey 1 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
reaperducer 1 hours ago [-]
Republicans are demanding "equal time."

Cool. I look forward to hearing Whoopi Goldberg on AM talk radio.

yndoendo 38 minutes ago [-]
Repeal of the Fairness Doctrine created echo chambers. [0] Equal air time to different point of views of a topic turned into 100% or 99% network pushed point of view. This removed a standard person from having quality engagement to content designed an manipulated for personal gain by the networks. It was a good bridge to living together versus living divided.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_doctrine

jimbob45 2 hours ago [-]
Pure kayfabe. ABC needed any excuse to get rid of a show that no longer made sense in the modern era of streaming. NBC and CBS must be furious that they didn’t think of this first.

Edit: Ha I forgot that CBS actually did think of it first with Colbert’s show getting axed too.

2OEH8eoCRo0 2 hours ago [-]
Stupid take. These shows are cheap to produce and still get good ratings. They're profitable. What are they being replaced with?
jimbob45 1 hours ago [-]
You can’t resell old episodes. They only talk about news and celebrities relevant to each specific week. They’re instantly dated - no one is rewatching old episodes beyond a week. Even if there are some stragglers still watching them with their ancient cable TV subscriptions, they’ll be gone within five years and who wants to invest in a dying show with an expiration date?
buzzerbetrayed 2 hours ago [-]
Kimmel was fired because his ratings were shit, and advertisers didn't want him doubling down on a lie. Sorry, the FCC thing is just an excuse for people who don't want to admit that.
labrador 2 hours ago [-]
What lie was Kimmel doubling down on? I found his comedic observations pretty accurate, which is why they stung the MAGA faithful.
sghiassy 1 hours ago [-]
Can you speak more intelligently to your point. What laws were violated? Why would the FCC care about profitability of a show and advertisers?

HN threads are open to diverse opinions, but deserve more than vitriol

gjsman-1000 2 hours ago [-]
We also found out that Kimmel was planning a second attack on MAGA when the executives at ABC were already on-edge about the timing causing a backlash; simultaneously when Kimmel's ratings have dropped 43% since January to under 1.1M, which is "advertisers bailing out" territory. That's a lot duller than the Brendan Carr theory.
knicholes 2 hours ago [-]
So many political posts on the front page
Jtsummers 2 hours ago [-]
It's tangential, as most people here aren't involved in traditional media, but this is a government that is interested in suppressing speech it dislikes [1]. Not actively harmful speech, threats and the like, just things they dislike. If this continues it could have significant impact for companies in the US, working with the US, and people working in the US but from other countries. This is the same administration that wants to go through social media posts and comments of people visiting the country to screen them for bad thoughts. Members of the administration are calling on people to rat each other out to their employers for this thoughtcrime.

[1] https://clayhiggins.house.gov/2025/09/15/higgins-calls-upon-... - a recent example, out of Congress. Calling on social media companies to ban users because they said something he dislikes.

ian-g 2 hours ago [-]
There’s a lot of politics happening to us in real life right now too
KumaBear 2 hours ago [-]
Obviously caught your attention. So it’s made it front page for a reason
jjangkke 2 hours ago [-]
Overton Window shift basically. One side used cancel culture relentlessly for even the smallest slights. Now the other side is using the very same tactic. Many people who have kept out of the extremes have now shifted towards the right and those who ignore the shift are finding out the hard way.

I advise HN users who aren't aware of what's happening, read up on what Overton Window is and why its dangerous to continue posting the way you have without infosec.

You think you are posting only on HN but your posts are actually being distributed on other platforms by people who are very angry.

Users on Bluesky thought they were posting on Bluesky but they only found out too late, after they got fired because their political posts were being shared elsewhere.

There have already been few HN users who have been targeted for their radical views and have paid the price.

For your sake, please don't ignore this message.

mariusor 58 minutes ago [-]
I think it hits quite different when the canceling is done by a gaggle of oversensitive Karens as opposed to by members of the government.
lupusreal 2 hours ago [-]
That's my take. Its worse this time because it's coming from the government, but in a sense that makes it actually an opportunity to fight it in court (and they absolutely should.) In any case, the rules of engagement have been clear for years: if we don't like you, then we're coming for your livelihood.
etchalon 1 hours ago [-]
It's not "worse because it's coming from the government".

The fact it is coming from the government is what makes it terrifying.

lupusreal 58 minutes ago [-]
You seem to contradict yourself. It's worse, yes? Your first sentence says no while your second sentence says yes.
mallowdram 2 hours ago [-]
Time to toss symbols and words. When everyone is the same thing that everyone's accusing one another of being, then signaling is done. We've reached the symbolic impasse that arbitrariness only enforces.

There's nothing coherent statement-wise coming out of the political leadership of all parties. That explains everything. No one is communicating. The news says nothing. All that matters is actions. And without a system of explanation for those actions, the species is dead.

Listen to the experts:

“...by getting rid of the clumsy symbols ‘round which we are fighting, we might bring the fight to an end.” Henri Bergson Time and Free Will

"When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less," said Humpty-Dumpty. "The question is whether you can make the words mean so many different things," Alice says. "The question is which is to be master—that is all," he replies. Lewis Carroll

“The basic tool for the manipulation of reality is the manipulation of words. If you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use them.” Philip K. Dick