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FCC主席运用权力施压媒体,影响节目播出
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联邦通信委员会(FCC)主席布伦丹·卡尔近期采取了不同寻常的强硬手段,利用其职位影响力施压媒体。在卡尔批评吉米·坎摩尔的言论后,ABC无限期暂停了其节目。尽管卡尔并未直接下令停播,但其通过施压拥有ABC地方联播站的媒体公司,成功达到了目的。此举被视为FCC主席在现代媒体监管中前所未有的干预,也反映了卡尔在任期内运用权力的新方式,包括威胁广播执照、阻碍并购以及调查多元化、公平性和包容性(DEI)实践。然而,这种做法也引发了争议,有批评者认为FCC不应干涉内容审查,并可能将机构政治化。

⚖️ FCC主席布伦丹·卡尔近期采取了不同寻常的强硬手段,利用其职位影响力施压媒体,最显著的例子是ABC无限期暂停了吉米·坎摩尔的节目。尽管卡尔并未直接下令停播,但他通过在保守派播客上发表言论,暗示拥有ABC地方联播站的广播公司若不“符合公共利益”行事,其执照可能面临审查,成功促使了ABC的决定。这一事件表明了FCC主席在现代媒体监管中前所未有的干预方式。

🚀 卡尔在FCC的任期内展现了运用权力的新模式,其行动包括威胁吊销广播执照、阻碍公司并购以及对多元化、公平性和包容性(DEI)实践展开调查。例如,FCC曾因“60分钟”节目对卡玛拉·哈里斯的采访被指控剪辑不当而搁置了Skydance对Paramount的收购,直到Paramount支付1600万美元和解后才获批。这些举措显示了FCC在广播电视领域(而非有线和流媒体)的特殊权力。

🤔 尽管FCC主席的干预引起了一些批评,例如FCC委员安娜·戈麦斯认为卡尔将机构政治化,并指出FCC无权审查内容或惩罚政府不喜欢的言论,但卡尔的策略仍然有效。通过对地方联播站施压,FCC能够间接影响全国性网络的节目内容,因为广播执照属于地方联播站而非网络本身。这种“啦啦队长”式的施压方式,即使不直接撤销执照,也足以传递信号并产生威慑作用,迫使媒体公司在关键决策上顾及FCC的立场。

Brendan Carr, a senior Republican Commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission, has been tapped to lead the FCC in a second Trump term.

Brendan Carr didn't order ABC to suspend Jimmy Kimmel, but the Federal Communications Commission chair got the outcome he wanted.

Kimmel, a late-night host who's long criticized and mocked President Donald Trump, had his namesake show on ABC suspended "indefinitely" after his comments about Charlie Kirk, the right-wing influencer who was killed in public last week.

Carr, a Trump appointee, suggested on a conservative podcast on Wednesday that owners of local broadcast stations that license ABC programming should pressure the network to cancel Kimmel. He said broadcasters who don't act "in the public interest" could get their licenses reviewed.

It wasn't the first time Carr had picked a fight with a major broadcaster. The FCC held up Skydance's acquisition of Paramount for months after Trump sued CBS News, a subsidiary of Paramount, claiming that a "60 Minutes" interview with Kamala Harris was deceptively edited. Paramount settled for $16 million in July. The FCC approved the deal a few weeks later.

With Kimmel, Carr once again got the result he wanted. Hours after Carr's critique, ABC pulled Kimmel's show after pressure from two major companies — Nexstar Media Group and Sinclair — that own local ABC affiliate stations.

An FCC commissioner pressuring local broadcasters into speaking up against a network is like "nothing we've confronted before in our modern day," said Al Tompkins, a journalism professor at Syracuse University.

While it may be new, it's also part of a pattern of Carr using his power in aggressive and novel ways at the helm of the FCC, from threatening to pull broadcast licenses to delaying a deal and investigating DEI practices.

Carr's maneuvering has led to some blowback. For example, FCC commissioner Anna Gomez, a Biden appointee, criticized Carr for politicizing the agency in a statement on Thursday.

"This FCC does not have the authority, the ability, or the constitutional right to police content or punish broadcasters for speech the government dislikes," Gomez said.

Carr and his spokesperson didn't respond to requests for comment.

How Carr is expanding the FCC's influence

Carr's actions show the FCC's particular power over broadcast TV, as opposed to cable and streaming, where it lacks authority.

The FCC issues broadcast licenses to stations and can revoke them if they are not operating in the "public interest."

Historically, the FCC has usually focused on limiting explicit content like nudity and swearing, Tompkins said. A high-profile example is the FCC fining CBS for broadcasting "indecency" after Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction at the 2004 Super Bowl, said G.S. Hans, a clinical professor of law at Cornell Law School.

The FCC's public interest language "isn't super powerful," which is why the government usually gets specific with its rebukes, Hans said.

Revoking a broadcast license is extraordinarily rare. One of the few successful attempts was when the FCC revoked the licenses for WLBT-TV, a local station in Jackson, Mississippi, that refused to cover the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s. Another was when a Jacksonville TV station owned by the Washington Post came under pressure after reporting a racist comment from a former Supreme Court nominee of President Richard Nixon. The effort went nowhere, and the next year, Nixon resigned.

"Renewal is almost always automatic," said Gigi Sohn, who was nominated by former President Joe Biden for FCC commissioner but withdrew after facing political pressure.

The mechanics of getting ABC off the air would be tricky, since broadcast licenses belong to local affiliate stations instead of the network itself. That means the FCC would have to revoke licenses from hundreds of stations across the country, which would be time-consuming.

Still, Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst at the Poynter Institute, said the FCC has other ways of pressuring broadcasters, such as holding hearings or commissioning studies. Carr has also gone down other routes, like investigating Disney and NBCUniversal parent Comcast for their DEI practices.

And as Paramount learned the hard way, the FCC can stand in the way of mergers.

Nexstar is attempting to acquire rival Tegna, and the FCC must approve the deal. The tie-up would likely require a rule change, since TV station owners can't increase ownership to more than 39% of US households. To consummate its deal, Nexstar needs to be in the FCC's good graces.

"They certainly don't want to be crossways with Carr," Tompkins said of Nexstar.

Beyond concerns about the FCC, companies like Nexstar can also face pushback from red-state viewers over highly politicized late-night shows, Tompkins added.

A new era of pressure

The FCC's "public interest" clause has historically been applied very cautiously, and rarely to censor political content, said Seth Stern, the director of advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation.

"The law has never been interpreted to give the FCC this kind of authority over particular programs (or their hosts), and in fact provides just the opposite," said Bob Corn-Revere, the chief counsel at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.

That may be beside the point. Even if Carr doesn't actually attempt to revoke licenses, his rhetorical pressure sends a signal.

Sohn, who's now a senior fellow at the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, said Carr is using his position as a "bully pulpit."

"It doesn't really matter what the exact powers are," Poynter's Edmonds said. "It's a kind of signal, and a threat."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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FCC Brendan Carr 媒体监管 广播电视 言论自由 FCC Brendan Carr Media Regulation Broadcast Television Freedom of Speech
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