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US network halts Jimmy Kimmel Live! after Charlie Kirk remarks 

United States television network ABC has announced it will indefinitely cease airing Jimmy Kimmel Live due to comments made by the popular chat show’s host about the assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.

Walt Disney-owned ABC said on Wednesday the show would be “preempted indefinitely” due to Kimmel’s comments suggesting the man charged with Kirk’s assassination in Utah last week, Tyler Robinson, is a supporter of US President Donald Trump.

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“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterise this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said on Monday in a monologue on his long-running late-night talk show.

Earlier, Nexstar Media, one of the country’s largest local TV station owners, including at least 28 ABC affiliates, announced it would stop airing the show over Kimmel’s remarks about the Kirk killing.

Announcing the move, Nexstar Media President Andrew Alford said Kimmel’s comments were “offensive and insensitive at a critical time in our national political discourse”.

“We do not believe they reflect the spectrum of opinions, views, or values of the local communities in which we are located,” he said.

While Utah prosecutors have formally charged Robinson with the murder of Charlie Kirk and said they will seek the death penalty, questions remain about a possible motive.

Kimmel’s comments also drew condemnation on Wednesday from Brendan Carr, the chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the independent US government TV, radio and internet regulator.

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In an interview with right-wing YouTuber Benny Johnson, Carr described Kimmel’s comments as “the sickest conduct possible”, and he also appeared to threaten ABC affiliate licences over the presenter’s remarks.

“What people don’t understand is that the broadcasters … have a licence granted by us at the FCC, and that comes with it an obligation to operate in the public interest,” Carr said.

Carr explicitly called on ABC affiliates to “push back” on the network’s airing of Jimmy Kimmel Live as they run the risk of ” licence revocation” due to a “pattern of news distortion”.

“When we see stuff like this, look, we can do this the easy way or the hard way. These companies can find ways to change conduct, on Kimmel, or there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead,” he said.

Following news of Kimmel’s cancellation on Nexstar, Carr told The Hollywood Reporter news outlet he wanted to thank the firm “for doing the right thing”.

At least one other station group had contacted ABC about the Kimmel show, suggesting that an affiliate revolt may have played a role in the decision, an unnamed source told The Hollywood Reporter.

Kimmel’s cancellation is the latest in a spate of firings over the past week, brought on by a conservative backlash to public comments about Kirk’s killing that have been deemed insensitive.

Conservatives have mourned Kirk as a martyr who championed patriotism, open debate and Christian values. Others have rebuked his divisive views, including on immigration and Islamophobia, with some also celebrating his death.

Journalists, academics and doctors are among those who have been fired or investigated by their employers over comments made about Kirk, mirroring the much-maligned cancellation campaigns of recent years associated with America’s left and sparking debate over the limits of free speech in the US.

 

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After Long Night of Outages, WAPA Brings Unit Back Online to Stabilize Power

Power was out for much of St. Thomas early to mid-Wednesday, stretching from about 1 a.m. until nearly 10 a.m. for customers on several feeders, the latest in a string of blackouts tied to limited generation capacity at the Randolph Harley Power Plant.
With power restored by noon, Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority CEO Karl Knight said there was finally some better news: a long-dormant generating unit had been repaired and returned to service, adding 20 megawatts of capacity and giving WAPA what he described as “more than adequate generation” to meet demand.
Knight explained that the recent outages stem from a design flaw in Phase II of the Wartsila power units. The four engines, each rated at nine megawatts, are linked by shared systems. When a compressed air line failed last week, one unit tripped and automatically shut down the others. “They function individually, but there are common systems that tie them together, and in this case one failure took out all four,” Knight said. “That’s something we are now working with Wärtsilä to correct, so they operate completely independent of each other.”
The loss of those units left the utility scrambling to keep up with demand and forced rotational outages across St. Thomas-St. John, that began Sept. 11, when WAPA issued a series of alerts warning that feeders 7B, 8A, 8B, 9C, 6A and others would be cycled off until additional generation came online. Wednesday, WAPA confirmed that Unit 27, one of the older Harley plant generators that had been offline for months due to deferred maintenance, was restored after a rebuild of its fuel pumps and other key components.
“Unit 27 isn’t one of the ones slated for retirement, and getting it back was critical,” Knight said in a call with the Source. “It strengthens our base. With all available units except Unit 23 now online, we have more than adequate capacity.” He added that customers should expect more stability beginning Wednesday evening, though he cautioned that reliability also depends on the success of ongoing maintenance and system upgrades.
WAPA has maintained that the outages in recent weeks were necessary to keep the grid stable, especially during peak hours.
Knight, after a briefing with his team Wednesday, said progress is being made. “We’ve been running really thin on generation, but with this repair, we are in a much better position than we were last week,” he said.

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