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With Kimmel under fire, FCC moves to review ABC's TV station licenses

Stephen Battaglio, Los Angeles Times on

Published in News & Features

The Federal Communications Commission is considering an early review of the Walt Disney Co.'s broadcast TV licenses amid criticism of ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel's provocative jokes ahead of the White House Correspondents' Association dinner.

The order could come as soon as Tuesday, according to Semafor, which first reported that the review is expected. The licenses for ABC's stations were not scheduled for renewal until 2028.

Disney has not commented on the possibility of a review.

The move was likely in the works before the latest kerfuffle over Kimmel, who is under fire for a comedic bit that satirized the annual Washington gala that Trump attended for the first time. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who has targeted the political content on the ABC daytime talk show "The View," told the Los Angeles Times on Saturday that an action related to ABC programming was coming this week.

Carr has suggested "The View" should not be exempt from the FCC's equal time rule that requires broadcasters to bring on a politician's rival to provide balanced coverage and multiple viewpoints.

Carr, who was at the Saturday dinner, made the remark just hours before the event was shut down after a Torrance, California, man breached security at the Washington Hilton while armed with a shotgun, handgun and several knives. The suspect, Cole Tomas Allen, was arrested and faces three criminal charges, including attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump.

Right-wing commentators have gone into heavy rotation with the claim that a routine by Kimmel inspired Allen to act.

During the bit that aired Thursday, a tuxedo-clad Kimmel called first lady Melania Trump "beautiful," saying she had "the glow of an expectant widow." The comic explained Monday that the gag was a reference to the age difference between Trump and his wife.

 

"It was a very light roast joke about the fact that he's almost 80 and she's younger than I am," Kimmel said. "It was not, by any stretch of the definition, a call to assassination. And they know that."

Since becoming FCC chairman last year, Carr has repeatedly threatened to use the levers of power he has to punish TV and radio stations that irritate Trump. His behavior has alarmed free speech advocates, including the FCC's lone Democratic appointee Anna Gomez, who noted that early station renewal reviews are exceedingly rare and largely futile.

"This is unprecedented, unlawful, and going nowhere," Gomez said in a statement. "It is a political stunt and it won't stick. Companies should challenge it head-on. The First Amendment is on their side."

Other White House administrations have threatened to pull TV station licenses in response to negative news coverage. At the height of the Watergate scandal in the 1970s, Richard Nixon's allies unsuccessfully attempted to challenge the TV licenses for three stations owned at the time by The Washington Post.

RKO General, a unit of the General Tire and Rubber Co., was the last company to lose broadcast TV station licenses in 1987, including Los Angeles outlet KHJ. The case was related to corporate malfeasance and not broadcast content on the stations.

The process to revoke the RKO licenses took seven years from the moment the FCC voted in favor of the move.

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©2026 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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