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Broadcast TV Is a ‘Melting Ice Cube.’ Kimmel Just Turned Up the Heat

Sep 26, 2025 11:00 AM

Broadcast TV Is a 'Melting Ice Cube.’ Kimmel Just Turned Up the Heat

After Sinclair and Nexstar pulled Jimmy Kimmel off air, the old affiliate model looks shakier than ever. Even Disney might do better without broadcast.

JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE Jimmy Kimmel Live airs every weeknight at 1135 p.m. ET and features a diverse lineup of guests that...
Jimmy Kimmel on the set of Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Tuesday, September 23, 2025.Photo-Illustration: WIRED Staff; Randy Holmes; Getty Images

Jimmy Kimmel returned to ABC this week. Sort of. About a quarter of ABC’s usual audience couldn’t see the talk show host this week after two major owners of ABC affiliates, Sinclair and Nexstar, refused to carry the show. Those right-leaning companies apparently felt that Kimmel’s joke—which included some disputed facts—was so unpardonable that they couldn’t expose their viewers to the comedian. They were also the first organizations to pull the plug on Kimmel, after Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr seemed to threaten action. That means that even the stations that did carry the show—as well as Disney, which owns ABC—might be courting the ire of a government official who seems eager to use his powers to silence critics.

Carr does have power. The FCC can grant and revoke broadcast licenses if stations don’t serve the public interest. It’s an artifact of a time when virtually 100 percent of viewers got their shows over the air, via television antennas. Local TV stations were granted slices of the very limited broadcast spectrum to beam their programs and had to meet certain standards to keep that privilege. But that era has passed. Local television stations now reach their audience via cable or internet bundles. Also, networks increasingly stream their programming through apps. Yet Carr still has the ability to bully networks and affiliates by threatening to take their licenses.

This raises a question: What’s the point of maintaining the current system? It’s certainly a mess for Disney and its fellow network owners like Comcast, which owns NBC, and Paramount, which owns CBS. Instead of kowtowing to free-speech-hating regulators, and toadying affiliates who are fine with censoring ABC programming, maybe Disney should bid farewell to stations that decline to run its programming. Disney already streams shows on Hulu (which it controls) and on its own app. There have long been examples of local stations owned and operated by networks. What if Disney or Comcast let contracts with troublesome affiliates lapse and then started their own local stations without using spectrum—both as apps and cable channels? Let Nexstar and Sinclair find their own programming, where they can tailor content to any standard they want. Disney can happily bypass the airwaves without worrying about FCC threats. They can even say those seven dirty words!

I ran this idea past a former FCC commissioner, who pointed out some potential problems involving existing contracts and such. But generally, he agreed that the idea not only made sense but was already in motion, on the largest scale. “It’s what Disney is doing by streaming ESPN and everything else. It is something that has to be coming,” he tells me, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Blair Levin, the former chief of staff to an FCC chairman, was even more sympathetic to my idea. “Broadcast is a melting ice cube,” he says. It’s only a question of how long it will take to thaw. Five years? Ten?

So my idea is less novel than I thought. The Kimmel conundrum has only turned up the heat on a doomed chunk of frozen water. Even as I chatted with former FCC officials, Needham, an investment bank that tracks media, put out a note that suggested even more drastic action is warranted. Disney, it said, should immediately begin streaming its entire schedule! The money it would reap from ads or subscriptions would more than make up for any losses, and Disney’s market cap would rise.

I don’t expect that to happen right away. The multiyear contracts and ongoing relationships between affiliates and networks lock in the current situation for a while. But when I asked an executive from a company that owns TV stations whether the current arrangement was sustainable, I didn’t get the pushback I expected. “It’s a real question,” he tells me, admitting the relationship of late has become more fraught.

One big flash point between networks and affiliates is financial. When viewers began getting their local stations via cable, the stations successfully got the cable companies to pay them for retransmission. The networks demanded, and got, a cut of that money, and ever since there’s been spats about who should get what amount. There’s a limit to how much the stations can extract from cable companies—ultimately the consumer foots the bill, and if those fees rise too much, people will cut the cord and just watch streaming services.

Which might be where everyone ends up anyway. “Affiliates are paying more for less,” bemoans my affiliate source. “We are paying a greater and greater percentage of our retrans fees to the networks, and we're getting less and worse content—and they're using those fees to go build their streaming businesses!” The exec noted with dread that NBC just launched a much-touted sitcom called The Paper that is initially available only on its Peacock streaming network.

There are good arguments against abandoning local stations. It’s unlikely that national networks will make the investment in local news that television stations currently provide. It will be a beast to figure out how to handle sports rights, which hinge on fanatic local audiences. As Carr loves to point out, there are virtues of local control.

But that sentiment seems at odds with Carr’s apparent support of corporations owning more stations than is currently permitted. We already have a situation where some owners of multiple stations across the country, like Nexstar and Sinclair, exert control on newsrooms from afar. This leads to scenarios where the corporate head office writes ultraconservative scripts that local newspeople are instructed to read, whether they agree or not. When the Sinclair broadcast group refuses to carry the Jimmy Kimmel show on its affiliates in Washington, DC, Seattle, and St. Louis, that’s not community standards—it’s a mandate from a distant overlord that deprives those regions of a show that probably respects their values. Nexstar, the other corporation so quick to cancel Kimmel after Carr’s rant, is asking the FCC to approve a $6.2 billion merger to add more stations. That would put even more of the nation’s local TV stations in the hands of corporations far from their antennas.

I wonder why Nexstar is even pursuing a multibillion-dollar deal to buy TV stations. Traditionally it's been a great investment. But tradition is all that’s left when it comes to the original broadcast model. The ice cube is out of the freezer. Drip drip drip.

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Steven Levy covers the gamut of tech subjects for WIRED, in print and online, and has been contributing to the magazine since its inception. His weekly column, Plaintext, is exclusive to subscribers online but the newsletter version is open to all—sign up here. He has been writing about technology for … Read More
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