Muted: The Death of Dissent on Network TV
How CBS, ABC, and NBC neutered their most critical voices, and what happens when free broadcast media bows to power.
On Thursday, July 17, 2025, during a live taping of The Late Show, Stephen Colbert stunned his studio audience by announcing that the show would end its run in May 2026. He told the audience he had been informed the previous evening. The reaction was immediate: boos, gasps, and confusion. Later that night, Colbert also posted the news on social media.
CBS followed with an official press release, calling the decision “purely financial,” and claiming it was unrelated to the show’s ratings, content, or other corporate issues. However, that explanation is difficult to reconcile with reality.
Just days earlier, Paramount, CBS’s parent company, quietly settled a $16 million defamation lawsuit brought by Donald Trump over a 60 Minutes segment, after years of Trump publicly attacking both Colbert and the network. Around the same time, Paramount’s merger with Skydance, led by executives reportedly aligned with Trump’s worldview, was finalized.
Colbert has long been among the most visible and relentless mainstream critics of Trump’s authoritarian instincts. The timing of his show’s cancellation suggests CBS, facing legal, political, and advertiser pressures, chose to silence him rather than defend him.
His ouster is not an isolated incident. It is the latest and most visible sign of a broader trend: America’s broadcast networks retreating from dissent under mounting corporate and political pressure.
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CBS: The First Domino
Stephen Colbert wasn’t just another late-night host. He was CBS’s highest‑rated figure in his time slot, an Emmy winner, and one of the few mainstream satirists openly criticizing Trump.
Despite that success, CBS chose to end his show. In mid‑July 2025, just days after Paramount agreed to a $16 million settlement with Trump, Colbert returned from vacation to deliver a searing critique during a live taping. He called the payout a “big fat bribe”, telling his audience:
“As someone who has always been a proud employee of this network, I am offended… I don’t know if anything will ever repair my trust in this company. But… I’d say $16 million would help.”
The settlement, paired with Paramount’s pending merger with Skydance, raised red flags that politics — not performance — had become the guiding force. Within days, CBS confirmed the show would end in May 2026, citing budget concerns. Yet The Late Show still delivered about 2.5 million viewers per episode and continued to attract Emmy nominations.
Colbert’s departure is more than a programming change. CBS is not replacing him, but instead retiring The Late Show entirely, ending a franchise that has defined late‑night television for decades. Even success could not shield dissent when corporate interests aligned with political power. CBS, once known for courageous journalism and sharp satire, has now become the first major network to silence its most visible critic of Trump.
One question now looms: Who will be next?
See our earlier reporting on the CBS settlement plan here:
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ABC: The View, Kimmel & Moran
CBS is not alone in silencing its most critical voices. ABC has spent much of the past year managing a quiet retreat of its own — one that began with a high-profile legal settlement and continues through behind-the-scenes pressure on its on-air talent.
In February 2025, ABC quietly settled a defamation lawsuit brought by Donald Trump, agreeing to pay an estimated $15 million to avoid trial. The lawsuit stemmed from the network’s coverage of Trump during the 2024 campaign, which he claimed was defamatory. At the time, ABC issued a statement insisting the settlement was “purely pragmatic” and “not an admission of wrongdoing,” but many inside and outside the network saw it as an unmistakable signal that ABC was unwilling to stand up to the administration.
A few months later, in May, ABC executives reportedly approached the co‑hosts of The View and urged them to “strike a more balanced tone” and “consider the broader audience” when discussing Trump. According to internal sources, the co‑hosts resisted the request, with one reportedly telling producers, “We’re not here to be neutral about fascism.” The episode sparked tension between the show’s talent and management, though the pressure appears to have continued behind the scenes. (We reported extensively on that confrontation in May; subscribers can read the full report here.)
See our previous reporting on the CBS settlement and The View shakeup here:
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Then there’s Jimmy Kimmel, whose contract expires in 2026, the same year Colbert’s show ends. Kimmel, like Colbert, has been an unflinching critic of Trump throughout his tenure, and the odds of his contract being renewed seem increasingly slim in light of ABC’s recent pattern.
Finally, there is Terry Moran, ABC’s longtime senior national correspondent, who was abruptly fired in June after posting on social media that Trump adviser Stephen Miller was a “world‑class hater.” The network cited its impartiality guidelines, but the move came just months after the settlement and was widely perceived as yet another example of ABC’s increasing intolerance for staff who speak out too forcefully.
Taken together, these incidents paint a clear picture: ABC, like CBS, is prioritizing corporate and political risk management over journalistic independence. Its most outspoken hosts and reporters have been pressured, sidelined, or removed outright. The network that once aired some of the most forceful public debate in American media now seems intent on muting itself.
NBC: The Next to Fall?
While CBS and ABC have already taken decisive action to muzzle their most outspoken talent, NBC has so far avoided a high-profile cancellation or firing. But the signs of retreat are already there.
In recent years, NBC has quietly scaled back its willingness to engage directly with politics on air. Saturday Night Live, once known for its biting political satire, has noticeably softened its sketches. Cold opens that once skewered Trump week after week have been replaced with safer, less controversial material, and some sketches reportedly cut entirely before broadcast.
The network’s two late‑night hosts offer a study in contrasts. Jimmy Fallon, hosting The Tonight Show, has consistently maintained a light and apolitical tone, avoiding sharp criticism in favor of celebrity games and gentle humor. Seth Meyers, however, hosting Late Night in the later slot, has retained a more pointed political edge, especially through his long‑running segment “A Closer Look,” which regularly dissects Trump’s rhetoric and policies.
Meyers has so far avoided the kind of scrutiny and pushback that toppled others. His critiques tend to be detailed, consistent, and targeted, delivered in a tone that is sharp but measured. Rather than fiery monologues or sweeping condemnations, he focuses on specific actions and statements, often backed by evidence and humor. This approach, along with NBC’s apparent willingness to tolerate dissent in the later, less visible time slot, has allowed him to continue relatively unchallenged, for now.
Even these programs, however, have scaled back in scope. As the Wall Street Journal noted:
“Colbert’s show on CBS as well as NBC’s ‘The Tonight Show’ starring Jimmy Fallon and ABC’s ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ have cut back to four original shows a week in recent years.”
These changes have been framed as cost‑saving measures, but they also reflect a broader retreat from the kind of sharp, politically charged content that once defined late‑night and NBC’s reputation as a home for fearless comedy.
For now, NBC has avoided the headlines that CBS and ABC have generated. But with SNL muted, Fallon cautious, and Meyers increasingly isolated as the network’s last openly political voice, it may only be a matter of time before NBC too takes a more definitive step to align itself with the new reality.
Why Networks Matter
Some might wonder why it matters if a few late‑night talk shows or network news segments disappear. After all, audiences have been drifting to streaming and social media for years. But this retreat from political engagement on free, broadcast television is more consequential than it might appear.
For decades, network television served as the nation’s shared stage. The nightly news, bound by the Fairness Doctrine until 1987, provided millions of Americans with the same set of facts, regardless of which channel they chose. Anchors like Walter Cronkite, David Brinkley, and Peter Jennings became trusted voices precisely because they operated under a system that required balance, integrity, and public service.
Even as the Fairness Doctrine fell away and cable and streaming splintered audiences, network TV retained an unparalleled reach, particularly for those without cable or the means to pay for subscription services. Shows like The Late Show, The Tonight Show, and The View became some of the last free spaces where politics could be discussed honestly (and entertainingly) before a mass audience.
Late‑night talk shows, in particular, occupied a unique place in American culture. Beginning with Johnny Carson, they bridged the gap between hard news and humor, offering audiences a way to engage with current events without feeling overwhelmed. Hosts like Colbert, Kimmel, and even Fallon (in his gentler way) inherited that tradition. Political satire, cloaked in comedy, was able to say things outright that straight news sometimes could not, making dissent palatable and accessible.
Yet in recent years, networks have increasingly replaced substantive programming with inexpensive, apolitical reality TV. The Bachelor, The Voice, and similar shows dominate prime‑time slots because they are cheap to produce, generate reliable ratings, and avoid controversy. Meanwhile, even the few late‑night shows that remain have cut back to four nights a week, citing “cost savings.”
This shift isn’t just about economics. It reflects a conscious decision by networks to sideline critical voices and retreat from the public service mission that once defined American broadcasting. As network executives trade integrity for “brand safety,” the mass audience they once served is left with fewer and fewer ways to hear the truth, unless they can afford to seek it elsewhere.
When dissent is no longer free, accessible, and mainstream, it becomes a luxury product, and a democracy in which the truth is paywalled is already in peril.
It Wasn’t Always This Way
It can be hard to remember now, but there was a time when the news was treated as a public service, not a profit center.
For decades, the three major networks devoted their prime-time news operations to fact-based reporting, rather than entertainment. Broadcast news divisions were often money‑losing but were maintained as a matter of prestige and public trust. Anchors like Walter Cronkite, David Brinkley, and Peter Jennings became synonymous with reliability and authority because they worked in an environment that prioritized informing the public over pleasing advertisers.
This ethos was reinforced by the Fairness Doctrine, which, until its repeal in 1987, required networks to present controversial issues of public importance in an honest, equitable, and balanced manner. When the doctrine fell, and cable news rose, the pressure to turn news into a profit‑making product intensified.
Over time, investigative segments gave way to lighter features, budgets were slashed, and newsrooms shrank. Reporters like ABC’s Terry Moran, who pushed back too forcefully, found themselves out of a job. Even NBC, which once boasted the most robust investigative unit on television, has been accused in recent months of shelving politically sensitive stories.
What remains on the networks today is a pale shadow of what came before: news stripped of urgency, softened to avoid controversy, and increasingly indistinguishable from infotainment. The mission of informing the public has been replaced by the goal of not offending the powerful.
The question is no longer how it happened. That much is clear. The question now is whether it can ever be undone.
By 2026, Silence
What we are witnessing on network television is not just a series of individual decisions, but a coordinated retreat.
By May 2026, Colbert will be gone, and with him, the entire Late Show franchise. Kimmel’s contract is unlikely to be renewed. NBC’s Tonight Show and SNL have already muted themselves, while ABC’s View hosts and senior correspondents like Terry Moran have been pressured, sidelined, or removed. Investigative journalism has been softened, and the bold, satirical edge of late-night has been dulled into something safer, cheaper, and forgettable.
Network television — once the great equalizer, free to anyone with an antenna, capable of reaching tens of millions each night — is losing its voice. What remains are reality shows, lightweight news segments, and carefully manicured entertainment designed not to offend advertisers or the administration.
By the end of 2026, dissent on the networks will be little more than a distant memory.
But the networks are only one piece of the story. Public media, already under attack for years, is being gutted in plain sight. NPR and PBS, once trusted by millions, now face defunding and political capture, while Voice of America has already been handed over to propagandists.
What’s Next
In the next installment of this series, we’ll examine how the dismantling of public media — long the last refuge of independent, accessible journalism — is accelerating under the same pressures that silenced the networks.
When the lights go out on public media, what remains of our shared reality may vanish entirely.
Stay tuned for Part 2: The Silencing of Public Media.
Stay Informed. Stay Loud.
Subscribe to The Coffman Chronicle for no-BS political analysis, action guides, and weekly truth bombs you won’t get from corporate media.
Bibliography:
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“Jimmy Fallon Finally Talks About Trump, Charlottesville, and That Hair-Tousling Moment.” GQ, August 15, 2017.
“Donald Trump slams Jimmy Fallon’s ‘dying’ Tonight Show amid late night show cutbacks.” The Independent, March 12, 2025.
“Stephen Colbert’s Late-Night Show on CBS to End in May 2026.” Investing.com, July 17, 2025.
“Jimmy Fallon Mocks Trump’s Debate Performance.” NBC Insider, September 30, 2024.
“Jimmy Fallon Jokes Trump Wants a ‘Purge’ Day.” NBC Insider, October 5, 2024.
“Stephen Colbert’s Late-Night Show to End in 2026.” Reuters, July 17, 2025.
“Stephen Colbert Slams Paramount-Trump Settlement as ‘Big Fat Bribe.’” The Wrap, July 14, 2025.
“Stephen Colbert’s Late Show Will End in 2026 as CBS Retires the Franchise.” Vanity Fair, July 17, 2025.
“Jimmy Fallon Isn’t Interested in Political Comedy — and That’s Just Fine.” Vox, March 28, 2017.
“Late-Night’s Costly Decline: How Ratings and Budgets Are Shrinking.” Vulture, July 17, 2025.
“CBS to End Late Show in May 2026, Concluding Decades-Long Run.” Wall Street Journal, July 17, 2025.
This is the warning shot!! If nothing happens to Trump he will grow bolder!
I trust you. You tell truth.