If this were the only assault on freedoms by the government---a one time f**kup, maybe. Colbert first, then this---a new season of "60 Minutes" under new ownership that will be examined closely---Paramount looking to gobble up HBO Max---guys like Ted Cruz and Joe Rogan calling it an assault on free speech---no, this one leaves a mark. And it's awakened an otherwise entirely too complacent public.
Totally disagree. I don't think Nexstar and Sinclair made their point at all. They lost.
Disney put Kimmel back on the air after only three live pre-emptions (Fridays are "best-of"), while supposedly still talking to Nexstar and Sinclair. Nexstar and Sinclair pissed off viewers in all their markets, worried their stockholders, made themselves the bad guys in a story about the First Amendment, drawn unwanted attention to their politics and their ambitions for growth and started real-world conversations about how wise lifting the 39% cap is.
They even failed in their original objective. Brendan Carr's a punch line who has spent most of this week weaseling out of his tough-guy stance of the previous week. They didn't rid Trump of this meddlesome late-night comic, they gave him three nights off, the biggest audience he's had in decades for his comeback, made him the face of free speech for the time being, and....side effect....pretty much removed Charlie Kirk from the national conversation except for how he was involved in what happened to Kimmel.
And they got nothing for it.
Tell me you haven't been watching MSNBC or late night this week.
I'm confused. Are you saying what Kimmel said about Charlie Kirk or what commentators said about Charlie Kirk, and if so, which side?