you forgot the part where you prove its incorrect.
The “News Distortion” Rule
• What It Is: The FCC’s “news distortion” policy, referenced by Carr in the Kimmel case, prohibits broadcasters from deliberately falsifying or slanting news with the intent to mislead the public. It stems from the FCC’s broader public interest standard and was formalized in cases like the 1969 WLBT decision, where a station lost its license for biased reporting.
• Applicability: This rule is not limited to news programming. It applies to any content aired on broadcast stations that presents itself as factual reporting or could be reasonably interpreted as such, potentially misleading viewers about significant public events. However, the FCC has historically applied it narrowly, focusing on clear cases of intentional fabrication by newsrooms (e.g., staging events or knowingly airing false reports).
Again, the FCC has no jurisdiction here and the FCC head was absolutely wrong for saying what he said. It can be argued that Kimmel could be held to having to reasonably present factual information. My whole point was morons DO think he’s telling the truth.
From the podcast:
“This is a very, very serious issue right now for Disney… We can do this the easy way or the hard way. These companies can find ways to take action on Kimmel or there is going to be additional work for the FCC ahead… Kimmel appeared to be making an intentional effort to mislead the public that conservative activist Kirk’s assassin was a right-wing Trump supporter.”
And later
“We at the FCC are going to enforce the public interest obligation. If there’s broadcasters out there that don’t like it, they can turn their license into the FCC.”
Absolutely this is the wrong thing to say and it’s been ruled open that “satire” is not “news”. So they have no authority to do anything here in my opinion. However, it’s interesting because people absolutely DO think Kimmel is telling the truth. Even here you have smooth brains thinking he is right wing.
It’s not a violation of someone’s first amendment to enforce FCC guidelines. Again, all that happened was a threat — a vague threat — on a podcast.
There were no official actions taken by the FCC so no violation happened because — nothing actually happened.