Posted on 09/18/2025 6:10:00 PM PDT by DoodleBob
NEW YORK (AP) — Two ABC affiliate owners spoke out against late night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel ahead of ABC's decision to suspend the presenter over comments he made about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Their comments highlight the influence local TV station owners have on national broadcasters such as Disney-owned ABC.
Here are key facts about the two companies.
Nexstar Media Group
Nexstar Media Group, based in Irving, Texas, operates 28 ABC affiliates. It said it would pull Kimmel's show starting Wednesday. Kimmel’s comments about Kirk’s death were “offensive and insensitive at a critical time in our national political discourse,” said Andrew Alford, president of Nexstar’s broadcasting division.
The company owns or partners with more than 200 stations in 116 U.S. markets, and owns broadcast networks the CW and NewsNation, as well as the political website The Hill and nearly a third of the Food Network.
It hopes to get even bigger. Last month, it announced a $6.2 billion deal to buy TEGNA Inc., which owns 64 other TV stations.
The deal would require the Federal Communications Commission to change rules limiting the number of stations a single company can own. The FCC’s chair, Brendan Carr, has expressed openness to changing the rule.
Sinclair Broadcast Group
Sinclair Broadcast Group, based in Hunt Valley, Maryland, operates 38 local ABC affiliates. On Wednesday the company, which has a reputation for a conservative viewpoint in its broadcasts, called on Kimmel to apologize to Kirk’s family and make a “meaningful personal donation” to the activist’s political organization, Turning Point USA. Sinclair said its ABC stations will air a tribute to Kirk on Friday in Kimmel’s time slot.
Sinclair owns, operates or provides services to 178 TV stations in 81 markets affiliated with all major broadcast networks and owns Tennis Channel.
Controversies
Sinclair made headlines in 2018 when a video that stitched together dozens of news anchors for Sinclair-owned local stations reading identical statements decrying “the troubling trend of irresponsible, one-sided news stories plaguing the country” went viral. Sinclair didn't disclose that it ordered the anchors to read the statement.
Nexstar operates similarly.
Danilo Yanich, professor of public policy at the University of Delaware, said the company is the “biggest duplicator” of news content today His research showed Nexstar stations duplicated broadcasts more than other affiliate owners.
Affiliate influence
Lauren Herold, an editor of the forthcoming book “Local TV,” said the web of companies involved in getting Americans their television shows is “relatively unknown” to most viewers, though their influence has been made known for decades.
Often, Herold said, that’s been when local affiliates have balked at airing something they viewed as controversial, such as the episode of the 1990s comedy “Ellen” in which Ellen DeGeneres’ character came out as gay.
“It’s not a complete oddity,” Herold said. “I think what’s more alarming about this particular incident to me is the top-down nature of it.”
Whereas past flare-ups between affiliates and their parent networks have often involved individual local TV executives, Herold pointed to the powerful voices at play in Kimmel’s suspension: Disney CEO Bob Iger, the FCC's chair Carr, as well as Sinclair and Nexstar.
“The FCC kind of pinpointing particular programs to cancel is concerning to people who advocate for television to be a forum for free discussion and debate,” Herold said.
Jasmine Bloemhof, a media strategist who has worked with local stations, including ones owned by Sinclair and Nexstar, said consolidation has given such companies “enormous influence.” Controversies like the latest involving Kimmel, she said, “reveal the tension between Hollywood-driven programming and the values of everyday Americans.”
“Networks may push one agenda, but affiliates owned by companies like Sinclair and Nexstar understand they serve conservative-leaning communities across the country,” Bloemhof said. “And that friction is bound to surface.”
From a different article:
ABC’s decision to pull the show came shortly after its affiliate group, Nexstar, also announced it would stop airing it effective immediately.
Nexstar, the largest station group in the country has a major merger proposal before the Trump administration - its proposed acquisition of Tegna - which must be approved by Carr.
If the merger were to go through, Nexstar would have 265 stations in 44 states and the District of Columbia, representing 80 percent of US television households, according to Deadline.
This was a business move, fueled by what seems to be an economic Sword of Damocles held by Chairman Carr.
Now, it COULD be that Nextstar management disliked carrying Kimmel’s show. If so, the Carr “threat” may have been just the kind of Crisis of which they took advantage.
Nonsense. The leftists are in a fit and they are lost in their woke cauldron. Get lost clowns, no one believes you anymore.
Newsflash - Press claims ignorance to hide their own culpability
LOL Roseanne.
Yup. Big Mike had her fired from her own show. For nothing.
Someone posted that she should be given Kimmel’s slot.
That’s gonna leave a mark.
The 2018 Firing of Roseanne
On May 29, 2018, Barr’s top-rated show was abruptly canceled just hours after she posted a tweet comparing former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett to characters from Planet of the Apes while criticizing the Obama-era Iran Nuclear Deal. Barr has said repeatedly since then that she was not aware Jarrett was Black. The backlash was immediate.
That same day, then-ABC Entertainment president Channing Dungey issued a scathing statement.
“Roseanne’s Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values,” he said, “and we have decided to cancel her show.”
The announcement came despite Roseanne being one of the most successful sitcoms of that year, regularly topping ratings.
Disney is hoping to buy the NFL Network. With ESPN having Monday Night Football already, Kimmel would torpedo any chances.
So Jimmy had to go.
You really can’t see how a merger that would be on thin ice because of a monopoly might have bearing on this when the player involved in merger is responsible for getting Kimmel taken off the air
Paramount owns the NFL network I doughty they will sell it
Disney’s ESPN is in the process of acquiring the NFL Network and other media assets from the NFL, in exchange for the NFL receiving a 10% stake in ESPN. The landmark deal, announced on August 5, 2025, also includes the NFL’s RedZone Channel and NFL Fantasy, and is currently subject to regulatory approval.
(Paramount owns the NFL network
I Doughty they will sell)
One? 😁😁😄😛😜
fundamental transformation.
Kenyan style.
And don’t forget his puppet master Schwartz Gyorgy.
Exactly
Hey!
“:^)
😄😃🤣🤣🤣
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