The Jimmy Kimmel Kerfuffle and How to Think About It episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 17, 2025 · 30 MIN

The Jimmy Kimmel Kerfuffle and How to Think About It

from Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America · host Mark Tushnet, Louis Michael Seidman

We talk about the Jimmy Kimmel episode, a small victory in the fight against Trumpism. We range more widely, though, in identifying no fewer than five groups who have competing First Amendment interests in having Kimmel on or off the airwaves, which makes figuring out what the First Amendment “means” in this setting. We emphasize the interests of broadcasters in choosing what to air and the interests of potential listeners in hearing—and preventing others from hearing—what they want. Any government intervention supports the free-speech interests of one or another group and undermines the free-speech interests of other groups. After discussing the way in which New Deal constitutional doctrine tried to separate economic regulation from regulation of fundamental rights, we discuss the relation between property rights and the ability to exercise your right to free expression, we end with a discussion of the possibility of antitrust regulation of large media corporations, which was implicated in the Kimmel episode. Reconciling antitrust regulation of the sort progressives want with existing constitutional doctrine takes some serious analytic work, which progressives ought to be doing now.

We talk about the Jimmy Kimmel episode, a small victory in the fight against Trumpism. We range more widely, though, in identifying no fewer than five groups who have competing First Amendment interests in having Kimmel on or off the airwaves, which makes figuring out what the First Amendment “means” in this setting. We emphasize the interests of broadcasters in choosing what to air and the interests of potential listeners in hearing—and preventing others from hearing—what they want. Any government intervention supports the free-speech interests of one or another group and undermines the free-speech interests of other groups. After discussing the way in which New Deal constitutional doctrine tried to separate economic regulation from regulation of fundamental rights, we discuss the relation between property rights and the ability to exercise your right to free expression, we end with a discussion of the possibility of antitrust regulation of large media corporations, which was implicated in the Kimmel episode. Reconciling antitrust regulation of the sort progressives want with existing constitutional doctrine takes some serious analytic work, which progressives ought to be doing now.

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The Jimmy Kimmel Kerfuffle and How to Think About It

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This episode is 30 minutes long.

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This episode was published on October 17, 2025.

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We talk about the Jimmy Kimmel episode, a small victory in the fight against Trumpism. We range more widely, though, in identifying no fewer than five groups who have competing First Amendment interests in having Kimmel on or off the airwaves, which...

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