david Lettermanโค Condemns ABC Suspension โof Jimmy Kimmel Show as โ’Abject Surrender’
NEW YORK – David Letterman sharply criticized ABC’s decision to temporarily suspend Jimmy โคKimmel’s late-night show following apparent pressure from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC),calling it an “abject surrender” to political intimidation. The rebuke comes amid growing concerns about censorship and โthe influence of the Trump management on media outlets.
ABC suspended Kimmel’s show afterโ a segment critical of President Donald Trump sparked outrage โคand an apparent threat from the FCC. The move follows CBS’s controversial cancellation of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” in September, a decision critics โalso attributed to political pressure despite the network citing financial reasons.
“This is justโฆsad,” Letterman said in a statement released Wednesday. “To see a network roll over like this, to prioritize โฃavoiding a scolding from the government over supporting a comedian’s right to speak his mind, it’s deeply disheartening.It’s an abject surrender to intimidation.”
Kimmel himself โคaddressed the suspension with sarcasm, stating he has always “admired and respected”โ President Trump, but โคassured fans his showโ would not alter its critical tone. “Mayโ I just say, it โis a privilege and an honor to call โฃJimmy Kimmel my friend likewise it is an honor to do this show every night,”โค he said. “I wake up every day and count my blessings that I live in a country that atโ least purports to value freedom of speech and we’re going to keep doing our show the wayโฃ we’ve always done it with enthusiasm and integrity.”
The suspension has ignited widespread condemnation from media watchdogs and free speech advocates.โ Ari Cohn, lead counsel for tech policy at the Foundation for Individual โฃrights and Expression, stated, “We cannot be a country where late night talk show hosts serve at the pleasure of theโค president.โ But until institutions grow a backbone and learn to resist government pressure, that is the country we are.”
president Trump has publicly celebrated both the cancellation of Colbert’s show and the suspension of Kimmel’s, and on September 17 called โขon NBC to fire Jimmy Fallonโ and Seth Meyersโค next in a post onโข Truth Social.
The incidents raise broader questions about the future of political satire andโ the independence ofโค broadcast networks in an increasingly polarized surroundings. The cancellations and suspensions echo historical instances of government attempts to control media content, promptingโ fearsโค of a โchilling effect on free expression.