“I Really Don’t Want An Adversarial Relationship With the Network”: Exasperated Colbert Reveals Tensions With CBS’ Legal Team
The 'Late Show' host blasted the network's lawyers over a statement they released regarding his James Talarico interview.
On Wednesday, Carr also confirmed to the Guardian that the FCC had opened an enforcement action into ABC’s the View over an appearance Talarico made on the program earlier in the month. He declined to provide further comment on the nature of the investigation.
But Carr told reporters that the FCC was simply enforcing the rules on the books. “If you have a legally qualified candidate on, you have to give comparable air time to all other legally qualified candidates, and we’re going to apply that law,” he said.
The government shouldn’t be dictating the political content of late-night television — or of any other entertainment Americans choose to consume. But that’s exactly what the equal-time rule does. It is rooted in an entirely different technological landscape;
The Washington Post says the equal time rule is an example of outdated government over-regulation:
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The Colbert-CBS spat is about overregulation
The Trump presidency ought to be an education for progressives in the ways government overregulation can distort politics and business.dnyuz.com
Well that's the administration (and their stooges) for ya. The thing that gets me is the across the board ham-fisted nature of this whole fiasco. Of course Carr is willing to do whatever it takes to satisfy the fragile ego of the current occupant of the Oval Office, and CBS appears to be playing along, but it is (maybe not so) surprising how bad everyone is at this stuff. Of course I don't expect anyone in Trump's orbit to do anything other than shout "fake news" and throw a tantrum, but come on, CBS...did you see what happened with Kimmel? Did you think this was maybe a way to goose the ratings and revenue for the last couple months of Colbert's show and tell yourselves "we won't bungle it like ABC/Disney did!"?The FCC's Brendan Carr calls this "a hoax" and blames the media. Of course he does.
radioink.com
In this, and many other threads.You're so busy trying to post a rebuttal to every post here that you don't realize when you contradict yourself.
“Yesterday was a perfect encapsulation of why the American people have more trust in gas station sushi than they do in the national news media… And you guys ate it up like slop,” he continued. “And when it was pointed out to the facts were completely different than what the fake news media was running with, nobody did, like, an about-face or did a fact correction. They just pivoted and moved away.”
“I think you guys should feel a bit ashamed for having been lied to and to just run with the lies. I think it was an embarrassing episode for the media,” Carr added.
Political interviews on talk shows have long been interpreted as being exempt because those one-on-one political interviews play a role in informing viewers.
CBS is not the good guy here.You still don't get it. They saw the opportunity, and they took it.
Maybe. Who is the real bad guy here? CBS or the FCC? It sounds like you're more focused on CBS. It should be the FCC.
When you have government based on quid pro quo, that's what happens. The companies are just playing by the new rules.
In any case, Colbert is playing this for all he can. I expect he'll talk about it again tonight. Why? Because it's working.
It's both.Maybe. Who is the real bad guy here? CBS or the FCC? It sounds like you're more focused on CBS. It should be the FCC.
And this somehow exempts them from criticism? That's what you seem to be arguing.When you have government based on quid pro quo, that's what happens. The companies are just playing by the new rules.
Here's what Colbert said after CBS issued its statement once the backlash kicked in:In any case, Colbert is playing this for all he can. I expect he'll talk about it again tonight. Why? Because it's working.
They could have stood up for Colbert. Instead, they engaged in anticipatory compliance to a regulation that currently doesn't apply to them.CBS is not the good guy here.
Are you using voice-to-text software? If so, you need to make an exception: it rendered "bona fide" as "bonified".The issue here is if late night talk shows are "bonified news programs." If what they do gets reported by bonified news programs, doesn't that, by definition, make them news, and therefore exempt from the equal time requirements?
And this somehow exempts them from criticism? That's what you seem to be arguing.
Your theory that Colbert instigated this implies that Colbert is a liar.
Instead, they engaged in anticipatory compliance to a regulation that currently doesn't apply to them.
What it does it cut pretty strongly through the line "the media is the friend of the people" though.I don't think anything "exempts them from criticism." All I'm doing is explaining why they're not going to stand up to the people who can put them out of business.
Or perhaps he's an actor and entertainer. I'm not judgmental about it. He's become a martyr and that's all that matters.
Some accused Kimmel of being a liar, and I didn't agree with that either.
That seems to be the narrative.
Meanwhile, who benefits from the ratings explosion they experienced last week?
What it does it cut pretty strongly through the line "the media is the friend of the people" though.
(to @TheBigA) Are you using voice-to-text software? If so, you need to make an exception: it rendered "bona fide" as "bonified".
Profiles in cowardice.I don't think anything "exempts them from criticism." All I'm doing is explaining why they're not going to stand up to the people who can put them out of business.
Is "Weekend Update" on "Saturday Night Live" news? They do report real news stories and then in many cases make up stuff about the story.The issue here is if late night talk shows are "bonified news programs." If what they do gets reported by bonified news programs, doesn't that, by definition, make them news, and therefore exempt from the equal time requirements? If seems to me that this entire episode proved the point Colbert was making, that he should be exempt, because even the chairman of the FCC felt the need to comment on it.
Is "Weekend Update" on "Saturday Night Live" news? They do report real news stories and then in many cases make up stuff about the story.
Well, that's what I thought.That has been considered satire from SNL's start back in 1975.