NBC airs video message from Trump in apparent bid to provide equal time after Harris SNL appearance
NBC News aired a short video message from former President Trump on Sunday evening in an effort to provide the leading presidential candidates with equal air time after Vice President Harris made an appearance on “Saturday Night Live” (SNL). The network was broadcasting a NASCAR playoff race but toward the end of its broadcast,...
NBC News aired a short video message from former President Trump on Sunday evening in an effort to provide the leading presidential candidates with equal air time after Vice President Harris made an appearance on “Saturday Night Live” (SNL).
The network was broadcasting a NASCAR playoff race but toward the end of its broadcast, Trump looked into the camera and addressed the crowd in a recorded message.
The Hill has reached out to NBC News for more information, but the Hollywood Reporter noted that Trump said a Harris presidency would cause a “depression” and he encouraged people to vote.
A source familiar with the matter told the outlet that the appearance was related to providing Trump with equal time. The outlet noted that it was not clear if the Trump campaign requested the slot or if it was provided by NBC.
Harris made her debut on SNL less than three days before the election in a short skit for the episode’s cold open with comedian Maya Rudolph, who plays Harris on the show.
The Trump campaign immediately criticized Harris for going on the show, saying she was “cosplaying with her elitist friends” as her campaign “spirals down the drain into obscurity.”
On Sunday, the fallout from the appearance continued. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner Brendan Carr posted on X that her appearance was a “clear and blatant” effort to evade the FCC’s Equal Time rule.
The FCC’s “Equal Time” rule lets rival candidates ask for equal air time if they want it. Carr said it was designed to avoid “this type of biased and partisan conduct.”
Harris appeared on SNL for one minute and 30 seconds and under the FCC’s rule, Trump could request about the same airtime from the network.
The FCC regulation does not require a station to provide opposing candidates with identical opportunity, but rather comparable time and placement.
NBC filed a notice with the FCC on Sunday disclosing Harris’s air-time and said she appeared on the show without charge.
The Hill has reached out to the Trump campaign for more information and comment.