FCC Chairman Brendan Carr has opened an investigation into Comcast NBCUniversal’s relationship with its affiliates, days after President Donald Trump targeted the network in a social media post. Carr told Comcast in a letter Tuesday that the Media Bureau will scrutinize its affiliation agreements for restrictions on streaming negotiations or competing for local sports rights, as well as terms that could “unduly inhibit” local broadcast station programming decisions.
The FCC should investigate broadcast network late-night shows “to ascertain whether late-night shows on broadcast channels are violating broadcasters’ public interest obligations by advancing private agendas,” said the Center for American Rights in a complaint letter Wednesday. A previous complaint from CAR led to the FCC’s news distortion proceeding against CBS. Wednesday’s letter references CBS’ announcement that it was canceling The Late Show with host Stephen Colbert because it was losing money, and argues that this is evidence of a political agenda among broadcast networks. Colbert and ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel are both public supporters of former President Joe Biden, the letter said. Late night shows lean left, and “up until today, it could be justified as a profitable (mis)use of the airwaves, indicating some critical mass of consumers wanted it,” CAR said. “Now that myth is busted as well.” The CAR letter cited a 1975 proceeding against a station over slanted news broadcasts, the same precedent CAR cited in a previous complaint calling for the agency to take action against ABC over a reporter’s social media post (see 2506110053). Attorneys have told us that that proceeding doesn’t provide much of a precedent for punishing stations for slanted news, because the station owner in that case, Indiana broadcaster Star Stations, was accused of a host of other violations including witness intimidation, false financial reporting and lying to the commission. The FCC voted then not to renew Star’s licenses because of the licensee's broad misconduct, not its news reports. The FCC has “an appropriate role to ask how things got so bad at CBS -- and whether things are equally bad at ABC and NBC,” CAR said. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression’s Robert Corn-Revere, a former FCC chief of staff, said CAR’s complaint Wednesday “doesn’t rise to the level of frivolous” and amounts to a “fairness doctrine for late night talk shows.” However, “that doesn't mean this FCC under Chairman [Brendan] Carr won't entertain the idea,” Corn-Revere said.
President Donald Trump said in a post Tuesday that his settlement with Paramount over a 60 Minutes interview has been paid and includes $20 million in ads, public service announcements and programming, on top of the $16 million donation to his presidential library that Paramount previously announced (see 2507020053). The company had denied that the settlement included PSAs or any payout beyond the $16 million, and it appeared to reaffirm that denial Tuesday.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., several Senate Democrats and the Writers Guild of America are questioning whether CBS’ Thursday announcement that it’s canceling The Late Show, hosted by Stephen Colbert, stemmed from Trump administration pressure related to the federal review of Skydance’s $8 billion purchase of network owner Paramount Global. That company recently reached a $16 million settlement in President Donald Trump's lawsuit over CBS’ editing of a 60 Minutes interview last October with former Vice President Kamala Harris. Some attorneys see that settlement as aimed at easing the path to FCC approval of Skydance's deal, but Paramount has denied those claims (see 2507020053).
DOJ's statement of interest in the Children's Health Defense lawsuit against news outlets (see 2507110039) clearly supports the plaintiffs even while claiming neutrality, two International Center for Law & Economics scholars wrote Wednesday. The complaint alleges collusion by major news outlets and social media platforms, and "if there is a route for a successful antitrust case involving content moderation and sources of the news, this might well be it," Ben Sperry and Daniel Gilman wrote. However, the statement of interest "avoids or even obscures" major issues, such as how the plaintiffs could establish antitrust standing to bring the complaint and how antitrust remedies might be subject to First Amendment limitations, they said. DOJ didn't mention that the U.S. Supreme Court's 1945 Associated Press decision indicates antitrust remedies can't compel social media platforms to publish material they don't want to publish, Sperry and Gilman said.
Concessions from T-Mobile and Verizon that the companies offered as part of recent transactions were critical to getting major carriers to the table to address long-standing pricing issues, said Todd Schlekeway, president and CEO of NATE, an association representing infrastructure builders. The agreements also address concerns about workforce security and contractors who work on towers being fully vetted, he said.
Pennsylvania's Emergency Management Agency sent an alert Friday afternoon warning of a statewide intermittent 911 outage. The alert, which included "extreme" in the headline, asked individuals to contact their local 911 centers' non-emergency lines if they experience any issues. Individuals were also told to check their counties' social media and website for more information. "We are on top of the issue and working to restore full service as quickly as possible," wrote Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) on X.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court agreed Thursday to hold in abeyance a legal challenge to an FCC ruling that lets schools and libraries use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots and wireless internet services. The court's action came after the FCC reminded it that the agency's composition has changed since it adopted the school bus Wi-Fi ruling in 2023, and the current commission may no longer support the order (see 2507070012).
Trump Media and Technology Group's Truth+ streaming service is now available globally, it said Monday. Truth+ offers streaming channels and video on demand, as well as carrying the Newsmax cable news network, Trump Media said. The company -- which is majority owned by President Donald Trump -- also operates the social media platform Truth Social.
Paramount Global has agreed to a settlement in President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against CBS over its editing of a 60 Minutes interview last October with former Vice President Kamala Harris during the election, the company said.