2026年2月17日 美国东部时间下午5:43 / 路透社
美国纽约市,7月18日,《埃德·沙利文剧院》外展示的标牌,这里是拍摄《斯蒂芬·科尔伯特深夜秀》的场地。节点运行失败
华盛顿,2月17日(路透社) – CBS深夜秀主持人斯蒂芬·科尔伯特周一表示,该网络的律师禁止他播出对得克萨斯州民主党州议员詹姆斯·塔拉利科(James Talarico)的采访。塔拉利科正在争取其所在政党的美国参议院候选人提名。
“唐纳德·特朗普政府想要压制任何在电视上批评特朗普的人,因为特朗普做的就是看电视,”科尔伯特在周一播出的《深夜秀》中说道。
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上个月,共和党主导的美国联邦通信委员会(FCC)表示,日间和深夜电视脱口秀不再被视为“真实的”新闻节目,因此不再适用“同等时间规则”——该规则要求脱口秀节目必须为对立候选人的观点提供播出时间。
科尔伯特批评联邦通信委员会主席布伦丹·卡尔(Brendan Carr)和该网络的律师单方面以“纯粹的财务原因”执行卡尔的指示。
这些言论呼应了派拉蒙(Paramount)在7月宣布科尔伯特的节目将于次年5月停播时给出的解释——当时派拉蒙正在寻求美国联邦通信委员会对其与斯凯丹斯媒体(Skydance Media)84亿美元合并案的批准。
本月早些时候,路透社和其他媒体报道称,联邦通信委员会正在调查美国广播公司(ABC)日间脱口秀《观点》(The View)在采访塔拉利科后是否违反了同等时间规则。
唐纳德·特朗普总统多次敦促卡尔采取行动反对美国广播公司等广播公司,并批评这些网络存在他所谓的“片面报道”。
科尔伯特已将这段采访发布到该节目YouTube页面上,截至美国东部时间上午11点,该视频约有100万次观看。
脱口秀的变革性格局
自2006年联邦通信委员会媒体局对杰·雷诺(Jay Leno)的《今夜秀》采访部分豁免以来,脱口秀节目一直被视为符合“同等机会豁免”资格的真实新闻采访。
各网络一直将该裁决作为采访政治候选人的先例。
卡尔、派拉蒙斯凯丹斯(Paramount Skydance)和哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS)未回应置评请求。白宫也拒绝置评。
民主党联邦通信委员会委员安娜·戈麦斯(Anna Gomez)批评哥伦比亚广播公司决定不播出采访,称其为“审查行为”。她表示,联邦通信委员会无权出于政治目的向广播公司施压,而哥伦比亚广播公司有权自由播出该采访。
“这是又一个令人不安的企业屈服案例,面对本届政府更广泛的审查和控制言论的运动,企业选择了退缩,”戈麦斯说,“派拉蒙作为哥伦比亚广播公司的母公司,显然有政府监管事项待处理,但企业利益不能成为放弃播出有新闻价值内容的理由。”
派拉蒙斯凯丹斯目前正寻求收购华纳兄弟探索频道(Warner Bros Discovery)。
卡尔曾在9月施压广播公司停播美国广播公司深夜脱口秀主持人吉米·坎摩尔(Jimmy Kimmel),警告称他们可能面临罚款或执照吊销,并表示“现在是他们挺身而出的时候了”。此举引发两党批评。
两家主要广播公司表示将停播坎摩尔的节目,迪士尼曾短暂停播坎摩尔的节目后又恢复播出。12月,威斯康星州民主党参议员塔米·鲍德温(Tammy Baldwin)告诉卡尔,“你利用你在联邦政府的职位停播吉米·坎摩尔的节目,这显然是在试图压制言论自由。”
大卫·谢泼德森(David Shepardson)报道 | 比尔·伯克罗特(Bill Berkrot)编辑
CBS host Stephen Colbert says network barred airing interview with Texas US Senate candidate
February 17, 2026 5:43 PM UTC / Reuters
A sign is displayed at the Ed Sullivan Theater, where “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” is filmed, in New York City, U.S., July 18, 2025. 节点运行失败
WASHINGTON, Feb 17 (Reuters) – CBS late-night show host Stephen Colbert said on Monday that the network’s lawyers barred him from airing an interview with Democratic Texas State Representative James Talarico, who is running for his party’s nomination for the U.S. Senate.
“Donald Trump’s administration wants to silence anyone who says anything bad about Trump on TV, because all Trump does is watch TV,” Colbert said on Monday’s broadcast of “The Late Show.”
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The Republican-led FCC said last month that daytime and late-night TV talk shows are no longer considered “bona fide” news programs that are exempt from equal time rules that require them to give air time to the views of opposing candidates.
Colbert criticized FCC Chair Brendan Carr and the network’s lawyers, saying they were unilaterally enforcing Carr’s directive for “purely financial reasons.”
Those words echoed the explanation Paramount provided when it announced in July that Colbert’s program would go off the air in May as it was seeking approval from the Federal Communications Commission for its $8.4 billion merger with Skydance Media.
Reuters and other outlets reported earlier this month that the FCC is opening an investigation into whether ABC’s “The View” daytime talk show violated equal time rules for interviews with political candidates after an appearance by Talarico.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly pushed Carr to take action against U.S. broadcasters and criticized networks for what he views as one-sided coverage.
Colbert posted the interview on the program’s YouTube page, where it has about 1 million views as of 11 a.m. ET.
CHANGING LANDSCAPE FOR TALK SHOWS
Until January, talk shows were deemed to have qualified for the equal opportunities exemption as genuine news interviews, ever since the FCC Media Bureau granted an exemption to the interview portion of Jay Leno’s “The Tonight Show” in 2006.
Networks have relied on the ruling as a precedent for recent interviews with political candidates.
Carr, Paramount Skydance and CBS did not respond to requests for comment on Colbert’s remarks. The White House declined to comment.
FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, a Democrat, criticized CBS’s decision not to air the interview, calling it censorship. She said the FCC has no lawful authority to pressure broadcasters for political purposes and CBS has free speech rights to air the interview.
“This is yet another troubling example of corporate capitulation in the face of this administration’s broader campaign to censor and control speech,” Gomez said. “It is no secret that Paramount, CBS’s parent company, has regulatory matters before the government, but corporate interests cannot justify retreating from airing newsworthy content.”
Paramount Skydance is seeking to buy Warner Bros Discovery.
Carr faced bipartisan criticism after pressuring broadcasters to take ABC late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel off the air in September, warning they could face fines or loss of licenses, and said “it’s time for them to step up.”
Two major broadcasters said they would pull Kimmel off the air and Disney briefly suspended Kimmel before restoring the show. In December, Democratic U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin told Carr, “you used your position within the federal government to take Jimmy Kimmel off the air in a clear attempt to chill free speech.”
Reporting by David Shepardson Editing by Bill Berkrot
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