FCC Chair Vows To Crack Down On Anti-Conservative Media’s ‘Free Monopoly’
1 Trending: Axios Says The Problem With Democrats’ Embrace Of Communism Is Republicans Noticing
2 Trending: DSA Colorado Win Shows Third-World Communism Is The New Norm In The Democrat Party
3 Trending: The Supreme Court Doesn’t Have The Final Word On Birthplace Citizenship
4 Trending: The Supreme Court’s Abysmal Birthplace Citizenship Ruling Is Exactly Why We Should Ban Surrogacy
FCC Chair Vows To Crack Down On Anti-Conservative Media’s ‘Free Monopoly’
The old, corrupt guard of broadcast media are being forced to come to terms with Equal Time. And it’s driving them insane.
Share Article on Facebook
Share Article on Twitter
Share Article on Truth Social
Share Article via Email
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr has a message for the biased corporate broadcast media: Their “free monopoly” without responsibility ride is over.
As The FCC investigates Disney-owned ABC on alleged discriminatory practices and The View’s absurd claims that it’s a “bona fide news program,” the old, corrupt guard of broadcast media are being forced to come to terms with Equal Time. And it’s driving them insane.
“The American people went through hoax after hoax after hoax, whether is was the Hunter Biden laptop, or ‘mostly peaceful’ protests, the list goes on and on,” Carr said this week on The Federalist Radio Hour podcast. “The legacy media has really done this to itself.”
“I think it’s good for them to want to correct course and earn a little trust back,” Carr said of the FCC’s renewed focus on the “statutory equal opportunities requirement” in the Communications Act of 1934. Equal Time, as the act’s Section 315 is commonly known, stipulates that a broadcast program that hosts a political candidate also must provide equal access to the office seeker’s opponent to appear on the show or in another commensurate capacity.
The section was amended in 1959 when Congress passed limited exemptions to the equal time requirement for content deemed “bona fide” news — interviews, newscasts, and documentaries. The idea was to spur news coverage of political campaign activity in the early days of broadcast television.
Congress gave the FCC discretion to determine the scope of each exemption, according to the agency’s guidance issued in January, putting broadcast stations on notice and sending shockwaves through the industry.
‘A Thumb on the Scale’
As the guidance states, Congress’ inclusion of “bona fide” in the exemption categories reflects congressional concern that “broadcast stations would apply the exemptions too broadly in service of a political agenda and thereby........
