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Comcast is restructuring and spinning off MSNBC, which means the network will lose resources and support from NBC News. This decision comes as NBC struggles with low ratings, as many viewers associate it with MSNBC's content. NBC aims to salvage its reputation by distancing itself from MSNBC, which they perceive as hateful and polarizing, particularly towards Trump and his supporters. As a result, MSNBC may be sold off, and other networks like NewsNation could benefit. Meanwhile, CNN, also facing challenges, might attract some former MSNBC viewers. The landscape for far-left networks appears to be changing significantly.

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Senator Ted Cruz expressed significant concern about the power of large tech companies, arguing that Google, in particular, has unprecedented control over information and acts as a monopolist. He stated that Google’s motto used to be “don’t be evil,” but claimed it now appears to be “evil,” and described Google as taking a new step by demonetizing or threatening to demonetize a conservative journalistic outlet over items allegedly found in comments sections posted by third parties. Cruz said he sent a letter to Google’s CEO, noting that he is the chairman of the Constitution Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee, demanding an explanation for why Google is “censoring free speech.” He questioned why this standard is not applied to left-wing sites that also host comment sections, insisting there are thousands of offensive comments on those sites as well. Cruz emphasized that Google owns YouTube and asserted that thousands of racist, bigoted, and offensive comments exist on YouTube, yet Google is not applying the same demonetization standard to its own wholly owned subsidiary. He argued that Google’s actions demonstrate an abuse of monopoly power to silence competitors, labeling this behavior as contrary to the law and dangerous for free speech. He underscored the contradiction that Google, and other tech companies, claim they are not responsible for comments on external platforms while simultaneously policing comments on external sites and not applying equivalent standards to their own platforms. In a vivid comparison, Cruz described Google as having become “like the empire in Star Wars,” suggesting that the new step represents Google “testing the Death Star” by granting itself the power to demonetize not only individuals but media organizations as well. He warned that such power could be used to go after outlets like Fox News and any media organization the company disagrees with, arguing that this must be stopped to prevent abuse of monopoly influence over speech. The segment ended with Speaker 0 acknowledging Cruz and noting that they would watch the story closely and have Cruz back to discuss it further.

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The speaker points out that the media is controlled by a few corporations and suggests that there should be regulation by the FTC. They mention that network TVs rarely report anything negative about the nuclear industry, such as the case of Westinghouse being pursued for fraud.

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In the early 1980s, 50 companies owned 90% of American media, now just 6 major conglomerates control it all. Comcast is the largest, making $69 billion in 2014, owning NBCUniversal and Hulu. Disney follows with $48 billion revenue, owning theme parks, movie studios, and TV networks. 21st Century Fox makes $32 billion annually, focusing on film and TV, including Fox News. Time Warner lost $100 billion after a merger with AOL, now separate. CBS and Viacom were once one company controlled by National Amusements. Today, 5 conglomerates effectively control the media landscape.

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Elon Musk is leading the charge to cancel Netflix because it's woke. Netflix has had bad, immoral content on its platform for years. So why Netflix? Here's a coincidence. Elon Musk's buddy, Larry Ellison, and Ellison's son David, they just closed on a deal to take over Paramount. Paramount just dropped $7,700,000,000 to lock up The US rights to the UFC. Paramount also bought rights to UFC from Endeavour, which is controlled by Silver Lake. That's right, Larry Ellison's Oracle and Silver Lake are also the new owners of TikTok. One of Elon's closest friends and investors, also tight with Trump, now controls TikTok US, Paramount, and the UFC rights, and suddenly his biggest competitor gets cancelled. MGX Abu Dhabi's sovereign fund They get a part of all of this Mass cancellation. It's a tool. It's a propaganda weapon to eliminate competitors and rewire the markets. Don't be their tool.

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Google's monopoly status and alleged bias in search results were discussed in a video. The speakers debated whether Google should be broken up into separate companies and highlighted the perceived bias in search results favoring certain political candidates. They also mentioned the lack of transparency in Google's algorithm and the dominance of left-leaning media outlets. The conversation then shifted to the antitrust ruling against Google, with one speaker suggesting that the outcome may be broader than just search-related issues. The video concluded with the acknowledgment that there is a strong push to limit the influence and power of tech companies like Google.

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The fairness doctrine, established in 1928, aimed to ensure a diversity of voices in media by limiting the number of radio stations one corporation could own. It required broadcasters to serve the public interest by providing news coverage and allowing different perspectives. However, in 1986, Reagan abolished this policy, leading to media consolidation. Today, a few companies control most radio and television stations, newspapers, billboards, and internet content providers. With no obligation to tell the truth, these companies prioritize profit over quality journalism. The decline of independent news divisions and investigative reporting has resulted in a lack of accountability and polarization in media.

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Broadcasters are different than any other form of communication, including here. We're on cable right now. Fox News doesn't have an FCC license. CNN doesn't. ABC, CBS, NBC, those broadcast stations do. with that license comes a unique obligation to operate in the public interest. the FCC walked away from enforcing that public interest obligation. president Trump ran directly at these legacy broadcast outlets, and he exposed them to these market forces. Nexstar, as you noted, stood up and said, look, we have the license, and we don't want to run this anymore. Sinclair did the same thing. So there's more work to go, but I'm very glad to see that America's broadcasters are standing up to serve the interest of their community. We don't just have this progressive foie gras coming out from New York and Hollywood.

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ABC News, owned by Disney, is being accused of deceptively editing Donald Trump's January 6th speech to make it seem like he incited a riot. They removed the part where he said they would march peacefully and patriotically to the Capitol. This edit was called out by Pierre Thomas, ABC's chief correspondent, who called it one of the dirtiest edits he's seen. ABC News is being called upon to address and account for this editing.

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The media is controlled by a few corporations like Disney, Fox, Westinghouse, and GE. They can say whatever they want and silence those who disagree. They rarely talk about the negative aspects of the nuclear industry, like Westinghouse being sued for fraud or GE operating nuclear bomb plants. These corporations receive billions in subsidies from the government and use tax money to support congressmen. They also dump toxic waste and GE made the bullets that shot JFK. When you buy products sponsored on this show, you contribute to this chain. McDonald's was ignored because they made jokes about O.J. Simpson. Lord Michael and Barry went to the same high school.

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Bill Owens is stepping down from CBS, stating he wasn't allowed to run the show as he always had. This follows Trump suing CBS for $20 billion, claiming a deceptively edited interview with Kamala Harris and calling for the network to lose its broadcast license. Ben Smith of Semaphore reports Owens quit after Sherry Redstone, owner of Paramount Global, reviewed a list of planned "60 Minutes" stories about Trump, following Trump's complaints about a segment on Ukraine. Redstone's Paramount is trying to sell to Skydance Media, owned by David Ellison, requiring FCC approval. It's believed Trump could use this as leverage. Owens' departure is seen as a public statement about top-down pressure influencing "60 Minutes" coverage of Trump. The question is what David Ellison will do, as the purchaser has leverage. Ignoring the controversy surrounding the news division could lead to problems for the acquiring company.

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"President President Trump ran directly at these legacy broadcast outlets, and he exposed them to these market forces." "It would it was not remotely market market forces. The market was operating before. It was pure government coercion and threats from Brendan Carr and from Donald Trump and the brow beating of corporations who need the FCC's approval for various broadcast licenses and so on to go and do this." "He is openly broadcasting the fact that this was what we call under the First Amendment viewpoint discrimination. He doesn't like what they're saying." "Under the First Amendment to the constitution of The United States, you have the right to engage in speech that is distasteful and offensive and disagreeable to other people."

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A mediaopoly. Home media is controlled by a few corporations thanks to deregulation by the FCC. Jimmy, Disney, Fox, Westinghouse, and good old GE? They own networks from CBS to CNBC. They can use defective votes, it was an unreported crime. Or when it was boycotted for operating nuclear bomb plants just to squeeze it out. That's a footnote, by the way. A footnote protects you from folks who doubt what you say. Now maybe the voices in k.

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Media is controlled by a few corporations, regulated by the FCC. Disney, Fox, and Westinghouse are involved. Westinghouse faced a fraud lawsuit. There were unreported crimes and boycotts for operating nuclear plants.

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I have amazing news! We've influenced AT&T, a $200 billion company, to reverse woke policies. Employees received a statement outlining major changes, which signals a move towards corporate neutrality, focusing on serving all customers regardless of political belief. Merit will be rewarded moving forward, and career development opportunities will be open to everyone, ending race-based preferential treatment. Employee resource groups will have more oversight, focusing on business development, not activism. For example, scholarships will be open to all. AT&T is also leaving the HRC CEI and ending divisive sponsorships, including donations to groups like the Trevor Project. They will follow President Trump's executive orders, eliminate the Chief Diversity Officer position, and end DEI training. Investments will be based on geographic need, and the focus will shift to making money for shareholders. Plus, pronoun pins are canceled!

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Elon Musk bought Twitter and immediately fired all the spies and a lot of other employees, including the PR and HR departments. This led to a shrinking pie for traditional media companies, making them desperate for clicks and resulting in less truthful and accurate news. Negative news gets more attention due to our instinctual negative bias. Historically, negative news only affected our immediate surroundings, but now we hear about the worst things happening worldwide. Elon Musk runs Twitter with only 20% of the original staff, showing that fewer people are needed to operate the platform. The goal is to make Twitter the least untrustworthy place on the internet and provide the truth to people.

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NPR and PBS heads testified before Congress this week, facing accusations of liberal bias. The question is whether the government should continue funding public broadcasters. Republicans have long sought to eliminate PBS. The speaker believes NPR is far left and that government subsidies are no longer necessary. These outlets became popular when political polarization was lower. Now that Republicans and Democrats are at odds, such organizations are no longer viable as public entities and should be private.

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Conservatives responded to disagreements with Bud Light by ceasing purchases. Democrats, however, react to disagreements with companies like Tesla by behaving like ISIS.

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Bezos owning the Washington Post is described as an arm of the CIA, a claim raised by Speaker 0. He suggests that the newspaper is part of a broader pattern where media power is consolidated in the hands of a few billionaires, accusing the outlet of being used to push a particular agenda. Speaker 1 responds dismissively to that assertion and mentions Ellison taking over of [text incomplete in the transcript], signaling ongoing concerns about who controls major media and institutions. The conversation continues with Speaker 0 asserting that Barry Weiss is trying to squash real news and hide it, and that reporters who are doing real journalism are being targeted, framed as investigations or actions run by a few billionaires who control much of the media landscape. A related critique follows, declaring Bill Clinton a “slimeball” for deregulating the Federal Communications Act of 1996. The speakers reference the consequence that there were thousands of independent radio stations, television stations, and newspapers before deregulation, and now six companies control 92% of the media as a result of that action, calling Clinton a “lousy little slime ball.” The discussion moves into personal remarks about Monica Lewinsky, with a claim that “I didn’t have sex with that woman, Monica Lewinsky,” followed by derisive language directed at Bill Clinton, describing him as “that little clown.” The conversation then shifts to the Epstein files, with frustration expressed about why those files are not being released. The speakers criticize the redaction of the Epstein files and question, “Where the hell are these Epstein files?” They argue that the redactions are to protect individuals, using charged language to describe the situation as disgusting, and they call for the files to be made public. The topic then turns to the DOJ’s handling of redactions related to Congressman Thomas Massey. The DOJ reportedly missed deadlines to provide reasons for the redactions to Massey and “walked right past his deadline.” The speakers say they interviewed Massey on the show, reiterating that the DOJ violated the deadline and ignored the will of the people, with the DOJ referred to as the “DOJ, Department of Jerkoffs.” Finally, Massey is praised as one of the top lawmakers, described as one of the few in Congress who is truly respected, and “one of a kind,” with Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 expressing strong admiration for his work and integrity.

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Elon Musk recently discussed government attacks on his companies since he embraced free speech and supported Donald Trump. These attacks include absurd regulations and fines, reflecting authoritarian tactics that suppress dissent. Historically, CEOs could voice concerns, but the climate has changed, especially during the COVID era and the BLM riots. Despite many Fortune 500 CEOs likely opposing the violence, none spoke out due to fear of repercussions for their employees and shareholders. Some companies even supported the riots financially. The solution lies in dismantling the administrative state, cutting bureaucratic agencies, and defunding them to restore individual rights and freedoms. We'll continue to monitor this situation.

Breaking Points

Bibi BRAGS About Social Media TAKEOVER To Influencers
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Influence and power collide as Prime Minister Netanyahu briefs U.S. social media creators in Washington about Israel’s propaganda war. He casts social platforms as battlefield tools, calling TikTok the most important purchase and urging talks with Elon Musk about X to secure a pro-Israel foothold. The briefing, part of a broader push to direct online narratives, stresses fighting anti-Semitism with the new media playbook and highlights TikTok’s reach among everyday users who aren’t engaged in elite discourse. Panel chatter then shifts to censorship, algorithmic influence, and the vulnerability of public opinion to paid messaging. Some speakers push for bans or tighter controls, even on Twitter and TikTok, while others concede the platforms’ power is overwhelming and hard to contest. The discussion enters lobbying and media ownership terrain, noting APAC, Hollywood consolidation, and Paramount’s evolving leverage, with HBO and other studios looming as potential power centers. The episode ends noting that the battle for influence is increasingly conducted through platforms rather than traditional diplomacy.

ColdFusion

Apple is Being Sued for Billions – Tech Could Change Forever
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Apple is facing a significant antitrust lawsuit after the U.S. Supreme Court allowed a customer lawsuit to proceed, claiming Apple has created a monopoly through its App Store. Critics argue that the mandatory 30% commission on app sales inflates prices for consumers. Apple contends it is merely a middleman and that developers set prices. If Apple loses, it may need to issue refunds on apps since 2007 and allow alternative purchasing methods, potentially impacting its revenue. This case could set a precedent for other tech companies, with ongoing calls for breaking up large tech monopolies. Additionally, investigations into Google, Facebook, and Amazon are emerging.

PBD Podcast

Hawley & Cruz GRILL Netflix, Disney's NEW CEO, Palantir's ICE Push + Gold, Silver & BTC CRASH? | PBD
Guests: Hawley, Cruz
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The episode surveys a string of high-profile corporate and geopolitical developments. Hosts and guests discuss Netflix’s proposed Warner Brothers acquisition, with focus on antitrust scrutiny, market power, and the streaming landscape, including how executives defend their content strategies amid political headlines. They examine Disney’s leadership transition, questioning the strategic fit of new leadership from the theme parks division to steer streaming and content, while noting the broader pressure on legacy media to adapt to direct-to-consumer models and shifting audience habits. The conversations frequently connect these corporate moves to political economy, noting how board dynamics, shareholder influence, and regulatory bodies shape outcomes in a rapidly changing media environment. On multiple threads, the panel links the entertainment industry’s evolution to broader societal debates about ideological content, audience trust, and market concentration, while acknowledging the friction between profitability, principle, and public perception. The discussion expands to national security and geopolitics, highlighting birth tourism as a lens on long-term demographic and political strategy, and analyzing potential policy responses, including visa rules, birthright citizenship, and lawmaking challenges. The segment on US-Chinese influence weaves technology, immigration, and national security into a picture of the strategic competition, with Palantir and other data-tools invoked as examples of how technology intersects with policy and surveillance. Additional themes include US sanctions policy, Venezuela’s oil industry, and how energy strategy intersects with global power. The conversation then pivots to domestic economics and energy policy, including housing affordability, tariffs, and the role of leadership in steering national priorities, before circling back to the US political economy and the global order. Across these topics, the speakers stress the volatility of markets, the power of big institutions, and the challenges of aligning corporate strategy with public interests, all while keeping a critical eye on how media narratives and policy decisions influence everyday life.

Breaking Points

Tim Dillon, Ted Cruz SHRED Kimmel FCC Suspension
Guests: Tim Dillon, Ted Cruz
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A high-stakes dispute over free speech erupts as Jimmy Kimmel’s show is indefinitely suspended by ABC Disney after a government warning and a regulator’s blunt language. Donald Trump rails against reporting, arguing that the press must be accurate or risk forfeiting free speech, and Ted Cruz weighs in with a defense of Brennan Carr’s stance while warning of dangerous, mafioso tone. The incident centers on an FCC commissioner’s remark that actions could be done the easy way or the hard way as part of a pressure campaign around a merger involving ABC affiliates owned by NextStar. Hollywood Reporter reporting suggests Kimmel planned to taunt MAGA critics the day before, a factor in ABC’s decision, though executives reportedly felt little they did violated policy. Across the network, the pressure to remove Kimmel is framed as part of a broader political and business calculation, with Disney and its affiliates needing the merger to go through, and the specter that government pressure taints editorial judgments. The View is also pressured; Brennan Carr’s warning is seen as a signal that corporate decisions may be swayed by regulators, creating a chilling effect for comedians, podcasters, and journalists. Ted Cruz’s remarks are juxtaposed with broader debates about media power and culture. He praises Carr while arguing the threat to revoke licenses is dangerous, comparing the posture to mafioso pressure. Tim Dillon and other comic voices condemn the easy-to-remove approach, saying a warning should not erase speech, and Andrew Schulz and Charlie Kirk are cited as critics. The discussion widens to a pattern of consolidation, with Lena Khan’s critiques of a five-firm media landscape and the claim that mergers enable political leverage and censorship through lawsuits and regulatory pressure.

PBD Podcast

Newsom Loves Biden, Trump Wins South Carolina & AT&T Outage Revealed | PBD Podcast | Ep. 370
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In episode 370, the hosts discuss various political and social issues, starting with their recent experience at a chiropractor event in Vegas. They touch on Gavin Newsom's comments about Biden and Nikki Haley, highlighting his support for Haley as a surrogate while questioning her viability after a defeat in her home state. The hosts also mention a mix-up where Trump mistakenly called Melania "Mercedes," which was later clarified as a reference to a CPAC host. The conversation shifts to the U.S. Air Force officer who set himself on fire in protest outside the Israeli Embassy, emphasizing the disturbing nature of the act and the mental health issues surrounding military personnel. They discuss the implications of this incident and the broader mental health crisis in the military. The hosts then address the struggles of Warner Brothers Discovery and CNN, noting a significant decline in TV advertising revenue and viewership. They analyze the challenges facing CNN, including leadership changes and the impact of streaming services on traditional media. The discussion continues with the recent AT&T outage, speculating on whether it was a cyber attack and considering Eric Prince's claims about China's involvement. They express skepticism about AT&T's explanation and discuss the implications of foreign interference in U.S. telecommunications. The hosts also cover inflation concerns, with the Fed's preferred inflation gauge showing signs of rising, indicating that interest rates may not decrease soon. They discuss the implications for the housing market and the economy. In a lighter segment, they discuss Gavin Newsom's political maneuvering and his potential presidential ambitions, while also criticizing the state of California's leadership and the ongoing homelessness crisis in Los Angeles. They highlight the frustrations of residents regarding safety and sanitation issues. The episode concludes with a discussion on the media's portrayal of various issues, including the recent comments from Dr. Phil about the impact of COVID-19 school closures on children, and the sensationalism surrounding political narratives. The hosts emphasize the need for accountability and transparency in media reporting and political leadership.
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