
President
Trump took another swing at the news media — and more baffling, at entertainment.
Seems like he hinted at regulation into the quality of late-night weekend broadcast comedy content. (Or
perhaps just an invite to a sit at the table in the writer’s room.)
We are all laughing these days, as well as shaking our heads at those tweets, and the numerous investigations swirling
around the President, his administration, and his 2016 campaigns. Must be some joke, yes?
Seems Trump doesn’t much laugh at Alec Baldwin’s portrayal of
him on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live.”
Trump’s tweet on December 16: “A REAL scandal is the one sided coverage, hour by hour, of networks like NBC & Democrat
spin machines like ‘Saturday Night Live.’ It is all nothing less than unfair news coverage and Dem commercials. Should be tested in courts, can’t be legal? Only defame &
belittle! Collusion?”
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Over the weekend, Trump seemed to be responding to the latest “SNL” parody of the Christmas movie “It’s a Wonderful Life.” It
featured a world in which Donald Trump, played by Baldwin, was never elected president.
Maybe Trump is interested in some sort of "fairness doctrine” -- abolished by the FCC in
1987 -- where specific “controversial” issues of public importance were required to receive balance coverage.
From our point of view, this could mean Trump doing a comedy bit of
his own. His resume? Those tweets to start.
As for ending the doctrine in 1987, the FCC said: “The intrusion by government into the content of programming occasioned by the enforcement
of [the Fairness Doctrine] restricts the journalistic freedom of broadcasters ... [and] actually inhibits the presentation of controversial issues...”
Trump is obviously a self-effacing
politician. (Maybe). He loves a good laugh at his foibles. (Perhaps). Going forward, get ready for Trump to start calling out not just “fake news” but “fake entertainment,”
“fake sports,” “fake reality shows” and fake other stuff.
In the freer-market, less-regulatory world Trump eventually wants, true TV marketing value can be
associated with all kinds of comedy content, as well as other genres. TV advertisers know this.
Those highly watched opening Trump skits on “SNL” pull in a lot of TV marketing
spending -- some $125.5 million in advertising for the show from December 2017 to December 2018, according to iSpot.tv. This is up from $98.5 million in previous the 12 months.
Trump should be
happy for TV advertisers. And laughter? Guess that will come later.