General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDid This Planned Broadcasting Merger Play a Part in Kimmel's Firing?
Last edited Fri Sep 19, 2025, 04:15 AM - Edit history (1)
The NexstarTegna deal a roughly $6.2 billion acquisition that would combine two of the biggest local TV station groups (including many ABC affiliates) and it requires FCC approval.
There is credible reporting suggesting that a planned broadcasting merger played a part in the decision to pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! off air (at least temporarily) but it isnt confirmed as the sole reason. Heres what the coverage indicates:
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Whats Known / Alleged
Nexstar Media Group is pursuing a $6.2 billion acquisition of Tegna.
Nexstar owns many ABC affiliate stations that would be involved in the deal.
After Jimmy Kimmels remarks about the killing of Charlie Kirk, Nexstar announced it would pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! from its ABC affiliates.
Some observers including Democratic lawmakers have explicitly linked Nexstars decision to remove the show to its pending merger request, suggesting that Nexstar might have been under regulatory or political pressure.
The FCC Chair, Brendan Carr, also reportedly made statements criticizing Kimmels comments, and some media‐analysis pieces suggest that broadcasters like Nexstar might want to stay on good terms given their regulatory business and pending merger approvals.
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Whats Not Confirmed
No public document conclusively shows that the merger approval was conditional on pulling Kimmels show, or that ABC or Nexstar made that decision because of a direct mandate tied to the acquisition.
Its not confirmed whether internal company discussions explicitly cited the merger as a reason for suspension.
ABC has cited concerns about the content being offensive and insensitive rather than saying the merger necessitated the pull.
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My Best Assessment (based on available info)
Given the overlap of:
1. The timing (Kimmels remarks → Nexstar pulling the show soon after)
2. Nexstars pending merger with Tegna and its need for FCC approval
3. Public statements and commentary from the FCC chair and other regulators
it is plausible the merger played a role in increasing pressure on Nexstar (and possibly ABC) to act in a way that avoided regulatory scrutiny or possible objections. But saying it was definitively the cause would be speculative at this point.
https://thedesk.net/2025/09/nexstar-sinclair-jimmy-kimmel-fcc-deals

still-prayin4rain
(510 posts)only somewhere between 23 & 33 ABC affiliates are owned by Nexstar (Every source I look at has a different numbers but they're all between those 2 numbers. There was no reason for ABC to care about that merger because around 90% of their stations were completely unaffected by it.
It did, however, probably play a part in Nexstar's decision to quickly pull Kimmel's show from their ABC stations very soon after the FCC threatened them.
ABC made the decision to suspend Kimmel for reasons completely unrelated to the Nexstar merger.