When media megamergers concentrate ownership into fewer and fewer hands, the public loses diversity of voices. But the danger grows sharper when political power is openly used to pressure, threaten, or punish those voices. Recent attacks aimed at Jimmy Kimmel and his network ABC, alongside rhetoric from Donald Trump, are not isolated spats. They are signals.
They signal to media companies that criticism may carry regulatory consequences. They signal to journalists and entertainers that speaking freely could cost their employers dearly. And they signal to the public that the watchdog meant to protect open communication — the Federal Communications Commission — may be drawn into political intimidation rather than standing apart from it.
The First Amendment does not erode all at once. It erodes when power and media consolidation combine with political retaliation, creating a climate where self-censorship feels safer than free speech.
Americans should be alarmed. This is not about one host, one network, or one politician. It is about whether our media environment remains free to criticize those in power without fear of reprisal.