FCC Chair Brendan Carr’s final warning to US broadcasters over ‘fake news’ amid Iran war: ‘they will lose…’ Brendan Carr, the communications licensing chief of the Trump administration, issued a stern warning to the US broadcasting sector on Saturday, stating that he may revoke the spectrum permits of broadcasters who he described as promoting “hoaxes and news distortions”. FCC chair Brendan Carr threatens broadcasters promoting false information amid Iran war. (Getty Images via AFP) Carr, the chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), shared on social media that broadcasters disseminating “fake news” have an opportunity to amend their practices before their license renewals....
FCC Chair Warns US Broadcasters Over 'Fake News'
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...ahh yes...freedom of the press....that much ballyhooed American civil right.....the head of the FCC is now weighing in to tell the mainstream media to "stop the fake news" about the "epic fury"...and re-tweeting a Trump post on the topic no less and who is this Brendan Carr who heads the FCC and is threatening their licenses? Gemini >>>>> Brendan Carr serves as the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (appointed January 2025), a role for which he was handpicked by Donald Trump. Known as a "warrior for free speech" by Trump, Carr aligns closely with Trump’s agenda, having authored the FCC section of Project 2025 and focusing on investigating mainstream media and social media companies. Key details of their relationship include: Key Appointments: Trump first appointed Carr to the FCC as a commissioner in 2017. He was then named Chairman in late 2024 to lead the commission during Trump’s second term. Project 2025 Link: Carr authored the FCC policy chapter for the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, detailing plans to reframe the FCC's power to target large technology firms and media companies. Actions as Chair: Under Carr, the FCC has taken an interventionist approach, including investigating news broadcasters for "distortions" and targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies, matching Trump's critiques of perceived media bias. Direct Alignment: Carr has been characterized as having the president's ear, using his position to target media outlets that have covered Trump negatively.
FCC Chair Brendan Carr’s final warning to US broadcasters over ‘fake news’ amid Iran war: ‘they will lose…’ Brendan Carr, the communications licensing chief of the Trump administration, issued a stern warning to the US broadcasting sector on Saturday, stating that he may revoke the spectrum permits of broadcasters who he described as promoting “hoaxes and news distortions”. FCC chair Brendan Carr threatens broadcasters promoting false information amid Iran war. (Getty Images via AFP) Carr, the chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), shared on social media that broadcasters disseminating “fake news” have an opportunity to amend their practices before their license renewals....
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The broadcast market place has been and will remain under competitive and revenue pressure from the many ways that consumers (you and me) can access news, entertainment and information. The value of local broadcasting and journalism (to me, fact based reporting and asking the kinds of questions journalists need to ask) is cited as a core reason to approve a merger like this which, even before any formal FCC action, blows past current ownership limits on national station reach. While broadcasters do need more regulatory flexibility, the question remains is: should there still be some limit, however much higher than current, on station ownership and market reach. Balancing reasonable deregulation with encouraging a diversity of voices and information sources, should remain an FCC and national policy goal. https://lnkd.in/eqJ5WWY8
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Is the FCC risking local broadcast stability by threatening license revocations? 🚨 Emily Barr’s open letter to Chairman Brendan Carr raises urgent concerns: the FCC’s aggressive stance could jeopardize local broadcasters who serve communities and uphold journalistic standards. This regulatory pressure risks chilling vital local news operations and shaking industry trust. The broader implications for media professionals? We must scrutinize regulatory actions and advocate for balanced oversight that protects both public interest and broadcaster viability. How can the broadcasting community unite to influence fair regulation without compromising industry standards? Your thoughts? Read the full open letter on TVNewsCheck: https://lnkd.in/d4CB2v-i #Broadcasting #FCC #MediaRegulation #LocalNews #JournalismMatters
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The FCC's interest in broadcasters' content appears to be driven by the current administration. Historically, the FCC has been hands-off on content. It needs to stay that way. https://lnkd.in/edTQHGVj #fcc #broadcasters
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Is the FCC risking local broadcast stability by threatening license revocations? 🚨 Emily Barr’s open letter to Chairman Brendan Carr raises urgent concerns: the FCC’s aggressive stance could jeopardize local broadcasters who serve communities and uphold journalistic standards. This regulatory pressure risks chilling vital local news operations and shaking industry trust. The broader implications for media professionals? We must scrutinize regulatory actions and advocate for balanced oversight that protects both public interest and broadcaster viability. How can the broadcasting community unite to influence fair regulation without compromising industry standards? Your thoughts? Read the full open letter on TVNewsCheck: https://lnkd.in/dnqTTnVe #Broadcasting #FCC #MediaRegulation #LocalNews #JournalismMatters
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Is the FCC risking local broadcast stability by threatening license revocations? 🚨 Emily Barr’s open letter to Chairman Brendan Carr raises urgent concerns: the FCC’s aggressive stance could jeopardize local broadcasters who serve communities and uphold journalistic standards. This regulatory pressure risks chilling vital local news operations and shaking industry trust. The broader implications for media professionals? We must scrutinize regulatory actions and advocate for balanced oversight that protects both public interest and broadcaster viability. How can the broadcasting community unite to influence fair regulation without compromising industry standards? Your thoughts? Read the full open letter on TVNewsCheck: https://lnkd.in/dnqTTnVe #Broadcasting #FCC #MediaRegulation #LocalNews #JournalismMatters
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"MPs say the BBC made the shift without clearly defining what success should look like. The broadcasting corp did not set detailed targets for individual language services or track whether audiences that previously relied on broadcast platforms were actually switching to digital ones. "Without a shared view of what 'good looks like' and timely data, teams could not redirect content and distribution quickly enough to secure audiences online," the committee wrote." #BBC #SavingMoneyNoMatterWhatItCosts https://lnkd.in/e_NG3Xpw
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A fascinating milestone in the ongoing consolidation of local broadcasting. Nexstar’s $6.2B acquisition of Tegna reflects how rapidly the definition of “local” journalism is evolving as national players expand their reach. While the FCC’s waiver shows adaptation to a changing media landscape, it also raises an important question: how do we preserve authentic local voices when ownership becomes increasingly centralized? The industry will be watching closely to see whether Nexstar’s scale truly strengthens community storytelling — or dilutes it. Most likely the latter, but that's my opinion.
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Important context from Tim Hanlon here! The FCC doesn’t license television networks. It licenses individual stations. That means the commission has no authority to revoke the “license” of a network like ABC or NBC as a national entity, because broadcast licenses exist only at the individual station level. Instead, the FCC grants licenses to hundreds of local stations owned by companies such as Nexstar Media Group, Gray Television, and Sinclair Broadcast Group. Any enforcement action would therefore have to occur station by station, license by license. In practical terms, that means targeting dozens — or potentially hundreds — of local broadcasters over editorial decisions made by a network news division in New York or Washington. It is difficult to imagine a regulatory approach more legally awkward — or politically explosive.
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Are Trump’s Broadcast License Threats Existential Risks or Political Posturing? President Trump has a long history of beef with news networks, and as war with Iran unfolds, Trump and allies have turned to a familiar playbook: threatening broadcast licenses in response to critical coverage. Brendan Carr, Trump’s FCC chairman, tweeted this week that broadcasters airing ��hoaxes or news distortions” would have a tough time when their licenses came up for renewal. For both the national networks and individual broadcast stations, these threats are concerning; without license from the FCC, their entire business and operation are in jeopardy. But according to TV Rev, these threats may amount to little more than political theater. The first reason is that the FCC licenses individual stations, providing no mechanism for the regulator to go after national networks like ABC or NBC. Even for individual stations, licensing revocation is a “nuclear option” and last resort, rarely ever attempted and only in extreme cases of misconduct. That the FCC could exercise that power against a single station, let alone hundreds, over claims of “news distortion” or the fairness doctrine seems extremely implausible. While the license revocation threat may be hollow, the broadcast industry is heavily regulated, and there are plenty of opportunities for the FCC to make life difficult for stations and networks that fall out of favor with the administration, for example routine requests for waivers, renewals, technical changes, license transfers, or merger approvals. https://lnkd.in/ec5nsczQ
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