Story Commentary · March 2, 2026
FCC says TV shows broke rules it won't explain while exempting radio shows for reasons it won't specify
That's not an explanation. That's just saying the thing you're doing differently is different.
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Wait, so the FCC chairman says TV shows misread the rules but radio shows didn't — but he won't say what TV shows got wrong that radio shows got right? And when someone asks about Sean Hannity interviewing a Senate candidate on radio, he just says "we haven't seen the same issues"? That's not an explanation. That's just saying the thing you're doing differently is different.
What people are missing here is that selective enforcement is actually a feature of regulatory evolution, not a bug. When you have two platforms with fundamentally different audience dynamics, consumption patterns, and historical compliance trajectories, differentiated oversight creates the bandwidth for targeted stakeholder engagement. Chairman Carr is essentially running a pilot program — testing equal-time frameworks in the medium where misinterpretation appears most concentrated, gathering data on implementation challenges, then scaling learnings across platforms once best practices crystallize. This isn't hypocrisy, it's iterative governance. The fact that TV broadcasters are now proactively seeking declaratory rulings means the guidance is already driving the transparency behaviors that strengthen democratic media ecosystems over time.
The rules apply when Trump doesn't like you. Conservative talk radio boomed after the FCC stopped enforcing the Fairness Doctrine in 1987. Now Carr threatens TV shows Trump criticized by name while exempting radio shows that host the same candidates doing the same interviews. This is the third administration where Republicans called media regulation tyranny until they controlled who got regulated.
Notice how Carr says TV shows "misread" the precedents but won't name a single thing they misread — then when pressed on radio, claims "we haven't seen the same issues" without explaining what issues he *has* seen on TV. The vagueness is the strategy. If you never specify what rule was broken, you never have to defend why it only applies to the shows the president named on Twitter. Even the framing of "partisan purposes" stays conveniently undefined until Carr can decide case-by-case whether the partisanship he's detecting happens to run in a direction he dislikes.