ABC Pulls
Jimmy Kimmel Off Air for Charlie Kirk Comments After F.C.C. Pressure
Mr. Kimmel
faced criticism from the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission for
remarks about the politics of the man who is accused of killing Mr. Kirk, the
conservative activist.
John Koblin Michael
M. Grynbaum Brooks Barnes
By John KoblinMichael M. Grynbaum and Brooks Barnes
Published Sept. 17, 2025
Updated Sept. 18, 2025, 1:48 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/17/business/media/abc-jimmy-kimmel.html
ABC announced on Wednesday evening that it was pulling Jimmy
Kimmel’s late night show “indefinitely” after conservatives accused the
longtime host of inaccurately describing the politics of the man who is accused
of fatally shooting the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
The abrupt decision by the network, which is owned by the
Walt Disney Company, came hours after the chairman of the Federal
Communications Commission, Brendan Carr, assailed Mr. Kimmel and suggested that
his regulatory agency might take action against ABC because of remarks the host
made on his Monday telecast.
The network did not explain its decision, but the sequence
of events on Wednesday amounted to an extraordinary exertion of political
pressure on a major broadcast network by the Trump administration.
Many Democrats immediately criticized the move, with Senator
Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, calling it “outrageous.” But
President Trump, in a social media post from Windsor Castle in Britain, where
he is traveling, described it as “Great News for America.”
The decision to suspend “Jimmy Kimmel Live” was made by
Robert A. Iger, Disney’s chief executive, and Dana Walden, the company’s
television chief, according to two people with knowledge of the matter, who
spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a private process.
The comments at the center of this week’s firestorm came
during Mr. Kimmel’s opening monologue on Monday night. “We hit some new lows
over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid
who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing
everything they can to score political points from it,” the host said.
Conservative activists castigated those comments, saying
they mischaracterized the political beliefs of Tyler Robinson, the accused
shooter. Prosecutors said Mr. Robinson had written in private messages about
Mr. Kirk’s “hatred,” but the authorities have not identified which of Mr.
Kirk’s views the suspect found hateful; his mother told prosecutors that her
son had recently shifted toward the political left and had become “more pro-gay
and trans-rights oriented.”
Mr. Carr, in an interview on a right-wing podcast on
Wednesday, said that Mr. Kimmel’s remarks were part of a “concerted effort to
lie to the American people,” and that the F.C.C. was “going to have remedies
that we can look at.”
“Frankly, when you see stuff like this — I mean, we can do
this the easy way or the hard way,” Mr. Carr told the podcast’s host, Benny
Johnson. “These companies can find ways to change conduct and take action,
frankly, on Kimmel, or there’s going to be additional work for the F.C.C.
ahead.”
Mr. Carr’s criticism of Mr. Kimmel was the latest attack
against the media by the president and his administration. Mr. Trump himself
sued ABC last year in a case that the network paid $16 million to settle. On
Monday, the president filed a defamation lawsuit against The New York Times and
four of its reporters.
This summer, Mr. Carr’s F.C.C. approved a major merger
involving CBS’s owner, Paramount, days after CBS agreed to pay $16 million to
settle a separate lawsuit filed by the president.
CBS also canceled “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,”
ending a network franchise for over three decades after next May. CBS said the
cancellation was for financial reasons, but many in the media industry have
speculated that it was done to curry favor with the Trump administration while
Paramount’s merger was pending. Mr. Colbert, like Mr. Kimmel, is frequently
critical of Mr. Trump and his policies.
Mr. Kimmel had planned to address the backlash to his
comments during his Wednesday telecast, according to two people familiar with
the program. But Disney’s executives made the decision to suspend the show
before taping began. The company’s board was not involved, according to one of
the people with knowledge of the discussions inside Disney.
As F.C.C. chair, Mr. Carr wields power over the broadcast
licenses that are granted to local TV stations by the federal government. In
the podcast interview on Wednesday, Mr. Carr encouraged local ABC stations to
“push back” and pre-empt coverage that does not serve “their local
communities.”
“Frankly, I think that it’s really sort of past time that a
lot of these licensed broadcasters themselves push back on Comcast and Disney
and say, ‘Listen, we are going to pre-empt, we are not going to run Kimmel
anymore until you straighten this out,” Mr. Carr said. (Comcast is the parent
company of NBC.)
Shortly after Mr. Carr’s remarks, Nexstar, an owner of ABC
affiliate stations around the country, said that it would pre-empt Mr. Kimmel’s
program “for the foreseeable future” because of the host’s remarks. Nexstar
recently announced that it planned to acquire a rival company in a $6.2 billion
deal, which will be scrutinized by the F.C.C.
In a social media post on Wednesday, Mr. Carr expressed
approval for Nexstar’s decision to pre-empt Mr. Kimmel, thanking the company
“for doing the right thing.” He added: “I hope that other broadcasters follow
Nexstar’s lead.”
Late Wednesday, Sinclair, another owner of many local TV
stations, said that it would also suspend Mr. Kimmel’s program, and called on
Mr. Kimmel to apologize and “make a meaningful personal donation” to Mr. Kirk’s
family and the activist’s political group, Turning Point USA.
Mr. Schumer, the Democratic leader, denounced the pressure
on ABC from the Trump administration as “despicable, disgusting, and against
democratic values,” and compared it to the playbook of autocratic Chinese and
Russian leaders.
“Trump and his allies seem to want to shut down speech that
they don’t like to hear,” Mr. Schumer said on CNN. “That is not what
democracies do. That is what autocracies do. And it doesn’t matter whether you
agree with Kimmel or not, he has the right to free speech.”
Late on Wednesday, after ABC pulled Mr. Kimmel, Mr. Carr
went on Sean Hannity’s Fox News program and described the actions by Nexstar
and Sinclair as “unprecedented.”
“I’m very glad to see that America’s broadcasters are
standing up to serve the interests of their community,” Mr. Carr said. “We
don’t just have this progressive foie gras coming out from New York and
Hollywood.”
He added: “This is an important turning point.”
Brooks Barnes covers all things Hollywood. He joined The
Times in 2007 and previously worked at The Wall Street Journal.


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