Disney had to ask the government to renew some TV station licenses. Instead of just filing the forms, it filed a protest.
It called the whole thing unfair and unlawful. That is a rare move for a big media company.
Disney owns ABC, one of the big four U.S. TV networks. That makes this fight a big deal.
The Fight
The FCC is the agency that regulates TV and telecom. It asked Disney to renew eight ABC station licenses years early.
ABC owns local stations across several big cities. All eight need their licenses renewed to stay on air.
Those licenses were not due until 2028 to 2031. The FCC moved that timeline way up.
Disney filed anyway, but under protest.
The company called the order unlawful. It also said the order threatens free speech.
Disney noted one more thing. The agency had not forced an early renewal like this in more than 50 years.
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The FCC's Side
FCC Chair Brendan Carr sees it differently. He says this is about a probe into Disney's diversity, equity, and inclusion practices.
It is not about free speech, Carr says. He claims Disney's earlier answers were not complete.
He says the company did not address key questions. So the agency pushed for an early review.
Carr said Disney's replies were disingenuous and nonresponsive. He said the agency had no choice but to act.
The next step could come fast. The FCC plans to let the public ask it to deny the renewals, and Disney can then file its side.
Disney says it will keep fighting. It plans to file its full case soon.
The probe itself is not new. The agency started looking at Disney last year under an old 1934 law.
The Backdrop
The timing has raised eyebrows. The early review came soon after ABC faced political heat from Trump.
The heat followed jokes by comedian Jimmy Kimmel on his late-night show. Soon after, the FCC moved up the license review.
Critics say the scrutiny looked political. They say the order is too neat to be a coincidence.
One sitting FCC member raised that concern too. Carr says the agency will follow the facts and the law wherever they lead.
What To Watch
A broadcast license is a legal permission slip. It lets a network put its stations on the air.
The real test is how hard the FCC pushes. It has the power to deny a renewal outright.
If the FCC denies a license, the station goes dark. That has rarely ever happened to a major network, and Carr would not rule it out.
For now, the stations stay on the air. The legal fight is just starting.
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