After refusing to air “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” for three nights after he returned from suspension, Nexstar Media Group said it will allow its ABC affiliates — including one in Vermont — to play the show, beginning on Friday.
In a statement, the media conglomerate said it had “had discussions with executives at The Walt Disney Company and appreciate their constructive approach to addressing our concerns.”
Both Nexstar and Sinclair Broadcast Group, which own channels that reach about 20 percent of American households, had boycotted Kimmel’s show after it returned on Tuesday night from nearly a week’s suspension. But they both reversed course on Friday.
WVNY, which reaches Vermont homes as ABC22, was among the stations blacked out. That drew the ire of many Vermonters, some of whom wrote to Seven Days — and the local ABC station — to complain. On Thursday, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) wrote to Nexstar’s CEO, urging him to reverse course.
Disney chose to suspend Kimmel on September 17 for comments he’d made two nights earlier about Charlie Kirk. The suspension, and perceived threats against broadcasters from the chair of the Federal Communications Commission, sparked a national discussion about freedom of speech and the government’s role in regulating over-the-air television.
“Jimmy Kimmel Live!” has seen some of its biggest-ever ratings in the days since he returned. And clips from the show have been making the rounds online — meaning Vermonters have been able to catch it, on delay at least.
Kimmel’s monologue from his first night back, for example, had more than 22 million views on the “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” YouTube page. The late-night host joked on Thursday’s show about getting a “Trump bump.”