{"id":897285,"date":"2026-04-06T09:19:56","date_gmt":"2026-04-06T14:19:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/2026\/04\/06\/the-media-merger-you-should-actually-care-about\/"},"modified":"2026-04-06T09:19:56","modified_gmt":"2026-04-06T14:19:56","slug":"the-media-merger-you-should-actually-care-about","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/2026\/04\/06\/the-media-merger-you-should-actually-care-about\/","title":{"rendered":"The Media Merger You Should Actually Care About"},"content":{"rendered":"<div data-testid=\"ArticlePageChunks\">\n<div data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<figure data-testid=\"cne-audio-embed-figure\"><\/figure>\n<div>\n<figure data-testid=\"cne-audio-embed-figure\"><\/figure>\n<p>During the first Trump Administration, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2018\/10\/22\/the-growth-of-sinclairs-conservative-media-empire\">Sinclair<\/a>, a company that owns almost two hundred local TV stations across the United States, and is known for its conservative bent, instructed its news anchors to recite a near-identical script on air. \u201cThe sharing of bias and false news has become all too common on social media, and more alarming, some media outlets publish these same fake stories without checking facts first,\u201d the script went. \u201cUnfortunately, some members of the media use their platforms to push their own personal bias and agenda to control exactly what people think. And this is extremely dangerous to our democracy.\u201d The message was recognizably Trumpian, and the fact that it was repeated verbatim dozens of times itself whiffed of thought control. The news site <em>Deadspin<\/em> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=_fHfgU8oMSo\">took clips<\/a> of different anchors intoning the same words and laid them over one another to make a hellish cacophony.<\/p>\n<p>Last summer, Sinclair <a data-offer-url=\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/business\/deals\/tv-station-owner-sinclair-proposes-merger-with-tegna-4bd3bb86\" data-event-click=\"{\"element\":\"ExternalLink\",\"outgoingURL\":\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/business\/deals\/tv-station-owner-sinclair-proposes-merger-with-tegna-4bd3bb86\"}\" href=\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/business\/deals\/tv-station-owner-sinclair-proposes-merger-with-tegna-4bd3bb86\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">reportedly<\/a> attempted to expand its empire, proposing a merger with Tegna, a broadcaster with nearly seventy stations. In the end, though, it was beaten out by a rival, Nexstar, which, in August, announced a deal to acquire Tegna for around six billion dollars. Nexstar was already the biggest station owner in the U.S. by revenue and market reach; if the acquisition went through, it would control more than two hundred and fifty stations across forty-four states and the District of Columbia. In response to a question about the Sinclair episode, Perry Sook, the C.E.O. of Nexstar, insisted that his company doesn\u2019t \u201cdictate content.\u201d The following month, however, Nexstar courted controversy of its own when it refused to air the late-night host Jimmy Kimmel\u2019s show on its ABC affiliates, after Kimmel insinuated, in the opinion of some viewers, that a right-winger may have killed Charlie Kirk. (Sinclair also pre\u00ebmpted Kimmel on its ABC affiliates.)<\/p>\n<p>Hours before Nexstar pulled the plug, Brendan Carr, the head of the Federal Communications Commission, had implied that stations could face licensing consequences if they let Kimmel\u2019s show air. (\u201cWe can do this the easy way or the hard way,\u201d Carr said, memorably.) He was quick to thank Nexstar for doing \u201cthe right thing,\u201d and has since openly endorsed its bid for Tegna, even though the F.C.C.\u2019s review of the deal is ongoing. So, too, has Donald Trump. \u201cWe need more competition against THE ENEMY, the Fake News National TV Networks,\u201d he wrote, earlier this month, on Truth Social. \u201cGET THAT DEAL DONE!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Many progressives, unsurprisingly, have opposed the Nexstar deal. And yet scorn has not broken cleanly along partisan lines. The pro-Trump networks One America News and Newsmax have both come out against the deal; the latter\u2019s C.E.O., Chris Ruddy, has been perhaps its most visible critic, arguing, somewhat convincingly, that big TV companies being allowed to get bigger is an existential threat to independent outlets like his own. (Ruddy has said that NewsNation, a cable network that is owned by Nexstar, has already won more favorable terms from distributors, despite having worse ratings.) Speaking at a congressional hearing days after the Trump endorsement, Ruddy suggested that the President had been poorly advised and didn\u2019t fully understand the matter. The politics of the issue are further scrambled when you consider that Trump at first appeared to side with Ruddy, with whom he is friendly, before U-turning.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<p>At the heart of all this jockeying is an obscure law that prevents owners of local stations from reaching more than thirty-nine per cent of households nationwide, across all their properties. (Indeed, Trump\u2019s initial stance centered not on the Nexstar deal but on maintaining this cap.) The way the cap is calculated isn\u2019t straightforward, but by any measure, a combined Nexstar and Tegna would blitz through it, meaning that the cap would need to be waived, raised, or abolished for their merger to pass. Critics see the cap as a relic of a bygone age\u2014it has its roots in the New Deal era\u2014and an unfair handicap for companies that must nowadays compete for ad dollars with tech and entertainment behemoths. Supporters of the cap argue, variously, that companies like Nexstar are doing just fine financially, and that allowing them to grow further would be bad not only for the diversity of viewpoints on local TV\u2014the Orwellian Sinclair video again springs to mind\u2014but for consumer prices and journalism jobs. (Addressing Congress, Ruddy claimed that if the price of milk increased at the same rate as the fees that station owners charge TV providers, a gallon would now cost sixty-nine dollars.) Carr has suggested repeatedly that green-lighting deals like Nexstar\u2019s would weaken the grip of New York and Hollywood liberals over TV in the heartland. Ruddy has argued the exact opposite.<\/p>\n<p>The Nexstar-Tegna story is politically messy and technical, and the deal itself isn\u2019t that big in dollars and cents. Evan Swarztrauber, a tech-policy consultant who supports lifting the ownership cap, and who advised Carr when he was an F.C.C. commissioner during Trump\u2019s first term, pointed out to me that the valuation of the entire merger is roughly that of the breakup fee in Netflix\u2019s proposed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/culture\/the-front-row\/what-the-warner-bros-sale-means-for-the-art-of-movies\">acquisition<\/a> of Warner Bros. Discovery. And yet, the Nexstar deal, which is comparatively under the radar, speaks to many of the same issues\u2014from the competitiveness of traditional media companies in a world of streaming and podcasts to the shifting antitrust posture of Trump\u2019s regulators\u2014and more besides. The conservative Washington <em>Examiner<\/em> has rightly <a data-offer-url=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonexaminer.com\/in_focus\/3906164\/nexstar-tegna-local-tv-merger-trump-affordability\/\" data-event-click=\"{\"element\":\"ExternalLink\",\"outgoingURL\":\"https:\/\/www.washingtonexaminer.com\/in_focus\/3906164\/nexstar-tegna-local-tv-merger-trump-affordability\/\"}\" href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonexaminer.com\/in_focus\/3906164\/nexstar-tegna-local-tv-merger-trump-affordability\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">described<\/a> the ownership-cap debate as \u201cone of the most consequential and least understood regulatory decisions\u201d of this moment.<\/p>\n<p>Viewed another way, the deal is the latest installment in the ongoing, if asymmetric, power struggle between the executive and legislative branches. (Many proponents of waiving the ownership cap believe that the F.C.C. can do so unilaterally; many critics insist that this would be illegal without congressional approval.) The fight over the deal also represents a fresh iteration of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/news\/fault-lines\/how-donald-trump-is-expanding-his-authority-while-shrinking-the-government\">a related trend<\/a> that I wrote about last year: the tangle of small- and big-government philosophies driving the second Trump Administration, and the coalitional tensions they seem to reflect. (After Ruddy claimed that Ronald Reagan would have supported his case, the <em>Wall Street Journal\u2019s<\/em> editorial board <a data-offer-url=\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/opinion\/chris-ruddys-paean-to-tv-regulation-1ad7627c?\" data-event-click=\"{\"element\":\"ExternalLink\",\"outgoingURL\":\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/opinion\/chris-ruddys-paean-to-tv-regulation-1ad7627c?\"}\" href=\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/opinion\/chris-ruddys-paean-to-tv-regulation-1ad7627c?\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">accused him<\/a> of \u201ctaking the Gipper\u2019s name in vain.\u201d) The cost-cutting zeal of <em>DOGE<\/em> may now feel like a distant nightmare, but deregulatory and regulatory impulses continue to coexist, not least at the F.C.C. If Nexstar, Sinclair, and their ilk may be poised to benefit from the former, networks that the Administration likes a whole lot less are already feeling the heat of the latter. And, in fact, the deployment of both, simultaneously, might not be a contradiction at all.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<p>The congressional hearing at which Ruddy recently spoke was not your typical partisan food fight. Ted Cruz, who chairs the Senate Commerce Committee, and who won headlines last year for likening Carr\u2019s comments about Kimmel to the language of a Mob boss, sounded distinctly unimpressed by the idea that the F.C.C. could simply override the will of Congress to change the ownership cap. But otherwise, he didn\u2019t take an overt position on the merits of such a change; Steven Waldman, the founder of the media-policy group Rebuild Local News, who also testified, told me that Cruz\u2019s opening remarks\u2014in which he traced the history of broadcast media from \u201cI Love Lucy\u201d through our modern era of media fragmentation\u2014were \u201calmost journalistic\u201d in their evenhandedness. Most of Cruz\u2019s Democratic colleagues were nuanced, too. In Waldman\u2019s testimony, he said that he sympathized, to an extent, with both proponents and critics of raising the cap\u2014even if evidence shows that corporate mergers certainly do not guarantee greater investment in local journalism, as industry lobbyists have suggested.<\/p>\n<p>At one point, Waldman had a strikingly friendly exchange with Todd Young, a Republican senator from Indiana. Young\u2019s statement \u201cwas among the most eloquent things I\u2019ve heard recently on the importance of community media,\u201d Waldman told me, adding that, in his experience, Republican politicians often have \u201ca real sense for not just the accountability aspects of journalism but the community-cohesion aspects.\u201d This mirrored another trend that I wrote about last year\u2014of Republican lawmakers in certain states quietly pushing bills to help revive flagging local outlets, beneath the fray of their party\u2019s national-level war on the mainstream media. Efforts to reinvigorate local journalism are often focussed on print media, but local TV news is more widely consumed\u2014and generally more trusted than its national counterparts. (A <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cjr.org\/the_media_today\/local_tv_anchors_ran_for_office_list.php\">surprising number<\/a> of local-news anchors have used that trust as a springboard to launch political careers.)<\/p>\n<p>Swarztrauber claims that Carr, too, values local news. \u201cThere are people right now arguing that we should just shut down all broadcasters and sell their spectrum to wireless carriers,\u201d he told me. \u201cCarr\u2019s not talking about that. He\u2019s saying that there\u2019s a public good here.\u201d Certainly Carr has long talked about deregulating the airwaves, including in a chapter that he wrote for Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation\u2019s infamous blueprint for a second Trump term, in which he advocated \u201celiminating many of the heavy-handed FCC regulations that were adopted in an era when every technology operated in a silo\u201d and \u201ccreating a market-friendly regulatory environment.\u201d (Swarztrauber recalled a trip Carr took to visit a radio station in Wyoming \u201cthat was a Dell laptop essentially playing music,\u201d and yet couldn\u2019t merge with a local news outlet owing to ownership rules.) After Trump returned to office, the F.C.C. invited comment on all agency regulations as part of an initiative titled \u201cIn re: Delete, Delete, Delete.\u201d Last week, I tuned in to the agency\u2019s monthly open meeting, and the agenda sounded conventional, technical (\u201cProposing Application Limit in Upcoming NCE Reserved Band FM Translator Filing Window,\u201d anyone?), and, at least to my untrained ear, dull.<\/p>\n<p>Carr\u2019s most attention-grabbing maneuvers, however, have been anything but. Since taking over the F.C.C., he has revived and reinterpreted regulations, or weaponized the threat thereof, in ways that have bent the arc of broadcast TV toward Trump, or sought to\u2014not least in the Kimmel case. At a glance, then, his approach appears to be inconsistent. But a coherent project comes into view if you see his primary currency as leverage, over beneficiaries and targets alike. Craig Aaron, the co-C.E.O. of Free Press, a media-advocacy group that strongly opposes lifting the ownership cap, told me that the divergent strands of Carr\u2019s approach are best understood \u201cless as a contradiction and more as a merger.\u201d The F.C.C. did not respond to my e-mail inviting Carr to comment, but he has described ending the ownership cap not only in free-market terms but as a means to \u201cempower\u201d smaller competitors to stand up to the major networks whose programming they carry, such that next time, perhaps, they have the leverage to keep a Kimmel off air permanently. (In the fall, Nexstar and Sinclair ended up reinstating his show, following talks with Disney, which owns ABC.) More overtly, Carr told the <a data-offer-url=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/01\/12\/magazine\/fcc-tv-networks.html\" data-event-click=\"{\"element\":\"ExternalLink\",\"outgoingURL\":\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/01\/12\/magazine\/fcc-tv-networks.html\"}\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/01\/12\/magazine\/fcc-tv-networks.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"><em>Times Magazine<\/em><\/a> that a \u201crealignment\u201d is under way in how right-wingers conceive of using government power to achieve their objectives. \u201cConservatives have complained about media bias forever,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve always relied on the idea that the free market would address it.\u201d But \u201cthis sort of libertarian free-market answer isn\u2019t working.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<p>If, as Aaron puts it, the \u201cmacro\u201d explanation for the enduring importance of traditional broadcast TV is that lots of people still watch it, then the \u201cmicro\u201d explanation is that one particular person still watches: Donald Trump. The President, of course, has taken aim at hostile late-night hosts\u2014Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, of CBS, and Seth Meyers, of NBC\u2014and called for major networks to have their licenses stripped. This is not exactly in Carr\u2019s gift. But he does have other tools. One of those is an \u201cequal time\u201d rule which, like the TV-ownership cap, predates our current era of informational super-abundance. The rule holds that, under certain conditions, networks who host a political candidate for office must offer similar opportunities to their opponents. News programs have generally been exempt from this requirement, and in 2006 the F.C.C. extended the exemption to a late-night interview that Jay Leno conducted with Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of California. Late-night shows have apparently assumed themselves to be exempt ever since. But, in January, the F.C.C. put them on notice. \u201cIf you\u2019re fake news,\u201d Carr warned, at a press conference, \u201cyou\u2019re not going to qualify.\u201d He later confirmed that his agency has opened an \u201cenforcement action\u201d involving ABC, after \u201cThe View\u201d aired an interview with James Talarico, a Democratic Senate candidate in Texas. (Carr has said that the rules apply to all broadcasters, but talk radio, a conservative-dominated medium, doesn\u2019t appear to be in his crosshairs.)<\/p>\n<p>Last week, Colbert claimed on his show that lawyers at Paramount Skydance, the owner of CBS, which has <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/news\/the-lede\/what-will-bari-weiss-do-to-cbs-news\">bowed to pressure<\/a> from Trump and Carr before\u2014and, as it happens, is trying to derail Netflix\u2019s takeover of Warner Bros. with a bid that would require the Administration\u2019s approval\u2014blocked him from airing an interview with Talarico, for fear of triggering an equal-time review. CBS countered that it had not made a prohibition but merely offered advice, inciting a furious on-air rebuttal from Colbert, which ended with him scooping a printout of the network\u2019s statement into a dog-poop bag. Colbert likened Carr to a \u201csmug bowling pin\u201d and mocked him for telling comedians to go do a streaming show or podcast if they want to get around F.C.C. rules. (\u201cGreat idea, man whose job is to regulate broadcast TV,\u201d Colbert quipped. \u201cIt\u2019s like when Arby\u2019s changed their slogan to \u2018Arby\u2019s: Would it kill you to eat a salad?\u2019\u00a0\u201d) At a press conference, Carr hit back that Talarico was peddling a \u201choax,\u201d and suggested that Colbert was bitter about his time in the \u201climelight\u201d coming to an end. Colbert\u2019s CBS show will indeed end, in May\u2014a decision that itself has been seen as an act of supplication to Trump. (CBS has cited financial reasons.)<\/p>\n<p>Carr\u2019s jibe struck me as weirdly TV-centric, in a very Trumpian sense. There is now a vast media world beyond broadcast\u2014as the foundational premise of the push to raise the TV-ownership cap reflects\u2014and I suspect Colbert will easily find his place within it; last week, he followed Carr\u2019s advice and uploaded his non-televised interview with Talarico to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=oiTJ7Pz_59A\">YouTube<\/a>, where it racked up millions of views. (The video, and its attendant controversy, also got Talarico a fund-raising boost.) Various observers suggested that Colbert and Talarico had benefitted from the Streisand effect, in which attempts to censor information often only amplify it. Swarztrauber told me that both men \u201cgot out of this situation what they wanted.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<p>Not that this means Carr lost\u2014I think CBS gave him what he wanted, too. The controversy unfolding made for \u201cone of the most fun days I\u2019ve had on the job,\u201d he said. Talarico suggested that he had been censored directly by the government, which Carr compared to \u201cthat meme where someone with a bicycle takes a stick and pokes it through their own front wheel, and they end up crashing, and then they cry for help.\u201d Carr accused journalists of falling for the charade. \u201cWatching the arc of this story, it was so clear where it was gonna go,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s why so many people don\u2019t trust the fake-news media anymore.\u201d\u00a0\u2666<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/news\/the-lede\/the-media-merger-you-should-actually-care-about\" class=\"button purchase\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Read More<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>During the first Trump Administration, Sinclair, a company that owns almost two hundred local TV stations across the United States, and is known for its conservative bent, instructed its news anchors to recite a near-identical script on air. \u201cThe sharing of bias and false news has become all too common on social media, and more<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":897286,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1125,31937],"tags":[6438,7113],"class_list":{"0":"post-897285","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-media","8":"category-merger","9":"tag-media","10":"tag-merger"},"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/897285","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=897285"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/897285\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/897286"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=897285"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=897285"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newsycanuse.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=897285"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}