CEO Perry Sook has grand ambitions to join the ranks of the major media players with a first-class broadcast network, a full-blown news operation and — not incidentally — become a billionaire in the process. I have been cheering his rise in the pages of Broadcasting & Cable and TVNewsCheck for years.
To take the next step, Sook needs Carr to lift or waive the station ownership cap so Nexstar can close on its $6.2 billion acquisition of Tegna and extend its national reach to 80% of the country.
By going along with Carr’s plan to defenestrate Kimmel, Sook may have thought he was only sealing the deal with Carr. But now that Kimmel has joined Charlie Kirk in the pantheon of First Amendment heroes, Sook’s course is not so clear or easy.
If he breaks with Carr and continues to preempt Kimmel [sic], he risks seeing his Tegna merger application rejected — or more likely, slow rolled or permanently shelved.
If he sticks with Carr, he’ll get the stamp of approval. But he’ll also be remembered as a sellout: the broadcaster who gave aid and comfort to Carr in his unholy war against ABC, CBS and NBC, and who helped undercut the free speech rights of every person who ever stepped in front of a broadcast microphone or camera.
I’ll wrap up with an admonition from Bob Corn-Revere, a First Amendment attorney and advocate who once worked for the late FCC Commissioner James Quello. He discussed the Kimmel affair on the Charlie Rose podcast.
“There is never a one-time payment to an extortionist,” he said. “If you give up your rights, you’re likely to see demands to give up more.”
Come on, Perry. Do you really want to be owned by a guy like Carr?