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FCC Official Offered to Aid in Targeting Disney, Records Show

So much for net neutrality—you can't even count on the FCC to keep its messages off your personal feed.

A senior Federal Communications Commission (FCC) official overseeing ABC-owned California stations privately offered to assist FCC Chairman Brendan Carr’s campaign last year against the Walt Disney Co. and Jimmy Kimmel Live!, according to internal emails obtained by WIRED.

On September 17, Carr threatened Disney with regulatory action regarding a monologue on Charlie Kirk's assassination, prompting major station affiliates to drop the broadcast and forcing ABC to temporarily suspend the show. Later that day, Lark Hadley, the FCC West Coast enforcement director, emailed Carr and FCC chief of staff Scott Delacourt.

Hadley wrote: “Please, do not let up, and let me know if I can help in any way.” The email was obtained via the Freedom of Information Act and was titled “personal note of support re Charlie Kirk ABC/Disney issue,” quoting Carr's remarks from an interview with conservative podcaster Benny Johnson. Hadley had previously been a broadcaster himself.

It is highly irregular for a career civil servant and enforcement chief to express such support for a politically motivated pressure campaign, or pledge services to a targeted retaliation effort against a broadcaster in their own jurisdiction. Federal ethics rules prohibit government employees from participating in matters where their impartiality could reasonably be questioned.

Carr’s office did not respond to a request for comment. While FCC headquarters typically handles television content complaints, Hadley's office holds direct enforcement authority over physical ABC-owned stations in its jurisdiction, including KABC-TV in Glendale, the broadcast origin for Jimmy Kimmel Live! The brief suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! became a defining test of Carr’s ability to leverage the FCC's regulatory apparatus against political critics. Following Carr's public threats, major affiliate networks Nexstar and Sinclair—both of which had multibillion-dollar mergers pending before the commission—refused to air the program, forcing Disney to temporarily pull the show.

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