CBS is calling out the FCC‘s inquiry into how 60 Minutes edited an interview with Kamala Harris as inappropriate for the federal agency, while warning that any government sanction against the network “would open the door to regular and repeated second guessing of broadcasters’ editorial judgments across the ideological spectrum.” The network’s remarks were made in a filing with the FCC.
A conservative group, the Center for American Rights, filed a complaint against the network last October, claiming that the network was being deceptive in the way that it edited the interview.
60 Minutes released the unedited transcript of the interview in response to an FCC inquiry, and said that it proved that the show engaged in routine editing practices.
But FCC Chairman Brendan Carr kept the proceedings alive, setting it up for a public comment period. “The Complaint filed against CBS for ‘news distortion’ envisions a less free world in which the federal government becomes a roving censor—one that second guesses and even punishes specific editorial decisions that are an essential part of producing news programming,” CBS said.
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