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Nexstar evaluating status of ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ for ABC stations after late night show’s return

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  • Nexstar Media Group said Wednesday it is continuing to evaluate whether it will bring “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” back to its ABC-affiliate stations, a day after the late night show returned to the Disney-owned network.
  • Nexstar’s broadcast TV stations affiliated with ABC did not air Kimmel’s return to late night on Tuesday.
  • Two of the largest broadcast station owners, Nexstar and Sinclair together own about 70 ABC affiliate stations in the U.S.
JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE! “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” airs every weeknight at 11:35 p.m. ET and features a diverse lineup of guests that include celebrities, athletes, musical acts, comedians and human interest subjects, along with comedy bits and a house band.
Randy Holmes | Disney General Entertainment Content | Getty Images

Nexstar Media Group said Wednesday it is continuing to evaluate whether it will bring “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” back to its ABC-affiliate stations, a day after the late night show returned to the Disney-owned network.

Nexstar’s broadcast TV stations affiliated with ABC did not air Kimmel’s return to late night on Tuesday.

“Nexstar is continuing to evaluate the status of ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ on our ABC-affiliated local television stations, and the show will be preempted while we do so,” Nexstar said in a statement. “We are engaged in productive discussions with executives at The Walt Disney Company, with a focus on ensuring the program reflects and respects the diverse interests of the communities we serve.”

Nexstar, along with fellow station owner Sinclair, said it would preempt Kimmel when Disney returned the show to broadcast on Tuesday, leaving customers in many markets unable to watch the show on their local station.

A Sinclair representative didn’t immediately comment Wednesday on the state of discussions between Sinclair and Disney, and whether it would similarly continue to preempt Kimmel.

Two of the largest broadcast station owners, Nexstar and Sinclair together own about 70 ABC affiliate stations in the U.S.

The comedian addressed the situation during his monologue Tuesday.

“We are still on the air in most of the country, except, ironically, from Washington, D.C., where we have been preempted,” Kimmel said after a commercial break. “After almost 23 years on the air, we’re suddenly not being broadcast in 20% of the country, which is not a situation we relish.”

Last week, ABC parent Disney said it would temporarily suspend production on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” following comments by host Kimmel that linked the alleged killer of conservative activist Charlie Kirk to President Donald Trump‘s MAGA movement.

Kimmel’s suspension came shortly after an announcement from Nexstar that it would not air the program — as well as comments from Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr suggesting ABC affiliate stations could be at risk of losing broadcast licenses over Kimmel’s comments.

“It was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man,” Kimmel said in Tuesday’s emotional monologue. “I don’t think there’s anything funny about it.”

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Justice minister ‘surprised’ Irish Prison Service paid ‘2 Johnnies’ €24,600 for podcast

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Minister for Justice Jim O’Callaghan has said he was “surprised” that the Irish Prison Service paid almost €25,000 to The 2 Johnnies comedy duo for a podcast as part of a drive to recruit more prison officers.

The Minister said it was “a lot of money to spend on a podcast for recruitment” when he was asked about the payment after it emerged on Wednesday.

The IPS confirmed that a fee of €20,000, plus €4,600 in VAT, was agreed with the Tipperary entertainers for the show.

The sponsored hour-long podcast featured prison staff speaking about life working in an Irish jail and the advantages of a job in the penal system.

“I’m surprised that amount of money was spent. It doesn’t strike me as a necessary expenditure when you consider all the obligations that rest on the prison service,” said Mr O’Callaghan.

It has also emerged that the comedy act received no payment from An Garda Síochána for a similar podcast with two garda recruits.

Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly said the Garda “did the same podcast” last year, when Garda members were interviewed by The 2 Johnnies “and we didn’t pay anything for it”.

He added it was “really useful for us … it was a really good audience for us” at a time when the Garda was running its own recruitment campaign.

The Minister was asked about the payment while attending the annual conference of the Association of Garda Superintendents (AGS) in Trim, Co Meath.

He said he went to the National Ploughing Championships last week to launch the new Garda recruitment competition at no expense and that the commissioner does this promotion work for recruitment too.

Mr O’Callaghan said public money had “to be spent efficiently and carefully”.

Asked about recent public order incidents in Dublin, Mr O’Callaghan and Mr Kelly said a new plan to increase the number of gardaí on the streets would yield clear results before Christmas.

They both rejected the allegation Dublin is unsafe or is run by street gangs in places.

Reacting to the two serious stabbings that took place in Dublin over the weekend, including a gang attack that left a 17-year-old with up to 20 wounds, Mr O’Callaghan said Dublin was “a large international capital city”.

“We are going to get some criminal activity in a city of that size. I am also aware attacks get a lot of national coverage,” Mr O’Callaghan said.

Mr O’Callaghan said the victims of assaults and other crimes, including the man and teenager attacked in Dublin at the weekend, would say they were not safe in Dublin, but overall, he believed the city was safe.

He said the latest data from the Garda and the HSE showed that knife crime and injuries from knife assaults were down and insisted that gardaí “have access to and control all parts of Dublin city”.

Mr Kelly, who took over as Garda Commissioner from Drew Harris last month, said there was no part of Dublin that was a no-go area run or even dominated by criminals.

“Dublin is a large city with 1¾ million, approximately, people in it. In any large city, you’re going to have lots of incidents,” he said, though he accepted some people felt unsafe.

A high-visibility operation was in place in the areas policed by Store Street, Pearse Street and Kevin Street Garda stations in Dublin city, having been rolled out by Assistant Commissioner Paul Cleary. This included far more frontline uniform gardaí on the beat, which was now being extended to other parts of the city and would become very obvious in the period to Christmas.

AGS president Supt Colm Murphy said that the new “operating policing model”, which has amalgamated several Garda divisions into much larger “super divisions”, was now fully rolled out.

However, the promised increase in manpower required to staff the additional roles for superintendents had not been delivered. This has resulted in “weakened links” between Garda members of all ranks and the communities they policed.

The superintendents want numbers in their ranks increased from 168 at present to at least 190. Mr Kelly said he was examining the numbers and believed more superintendents posts were needed.

There are about 14,400 members of all ranks in the Garda and Mr Kelly said he hoped the force would reach 15,000 next year.

The process of joining the Garda had been expedited with a much shorter period between being offered a place in the force and starting training.

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Irish Medical Council inspecting CHI intern programme after report flagged ‘unsafe’ conditions

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THE IRISH MEDICAL COUNCIL is conducting a three day assessment of the training programme for interns at Children’s Health Ireland (CHI), after a report flagged “unsafe” conditions for students and junior staff. 

A team of assessors visited Tallaght University Hospital and Temple Street today where they met with non-consultant hospital doctors, trainees and clinical staff, “excluding CHI directors and management,” according to an itinerary seen by The Journal.

The assessment comes as it was confirmed today that by 2027 CHI will be subsumed into the HSE entirely.

The Journal understands that most staff in CHI were only informed last night that four medical council personnel would be on site today, and for the rest of the week.

Staff were made aware that under no circumstances could consultants or members of CHI management be present for the medical council’s meetings with junior doctors and trainees.

Report on ‘toxic’ culture

An internal CHI report that became public this year flagged concerns over how a particular consultant was treating trainees.

The report said there was a pattern of “abrupt, unprofessional, intimidating and volatile behaviour towards trainees.”

It was decided that CHI would not have a new intake of trainees in 2022 until problems facing trainees were fixed.

Training at CHI sites has resumed since then, however no inspection process of training standards has happened on this scale at the three children’s hospitals since 2018.

The outcome of that inspection required an action and implementation plan being put in place at the time, but the internal report from January 2022 flagged serious concerns about training conditions in the hospitals after that implementation plan was completed.

The report also said that trainees reported a “negative” and “toxic” atmosphere which badly impacted them during their time interning at CHI hospitals.

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They also reported that one consultant had created a “psychologically unsafe” environment.

Trainees felt that they would be “punished or humiliated” for speaking up with ideas or concerns.

CHI to become a part of the HSE

Today the Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill confirmed that CHI is to be subsumed into the HSE, which will also be responsible for the oversight of the New Children’s Hospital.

“The National Children’s Hospital Ireland will be the central hub in the network of paediatric care with links to regional paediatric units, operated overwhelmingly by the HSE. Accordingly, I have decided to integrate CHI into the HSE structure,” she said this morning.

The decision comes after a string of crises and scandals in the organisation, ranging from long waiting times for children’s spinal surgery in this country leaving some children inoperable, children undergoing unnecessary hip operations, and unapproved springs being put into children during surgeries.

Reaction from advocates and opposition

Úna Keightley, the co-lead of the Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus Paediatric Advocacy Group this afternoon told The Journal “it was clear to us that CHI was not fit for purpose from the very beginning.”

“Subsuming CHI into the HSE does not wipe away the reality of what families have witnessed,” she added.

Keightley said that a statutory inquiry into CHI’s failings is needed, and transparency is needed on why this decision has been made, as she described it as a “complete U-turn from the Government”.

Sinn Féin’s spokesperson on Health, TD David Cullinane, today said that the Government has rearranged “the deck chairs of executives and board members” and that the decision will not improve outcomes.

“The minister has announced a plan to fold Children’s Health Ireland into the HSE. This will need to be teased out further.

“It is clear that significant changes are needed in Children’s Health Ireland, but whether that will be addressed by merging it with the HSE – which has many of its own challenges – is yet to be proven,” he said.

Cullinane echoed Keightley’s call for a public inquiry into CHI.

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Here’s What Happened Today: Wednesday

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NEED TO CATCH up? The Journal brings you a round-up of today’s news.

IRELAND


Independent presidential candidate Maria Steen with her husband Neill outside Leinster House after she failed to get the required 20 nominations to become a candidate in the presidential election. Leah Farrell


Leah Farrell

INTERNATIONAL

the-body-of-the-shooting-suspect-is-placed-in-the-medical-examiners-van-outside-the-apartment-building-near-the-scene-of-a-shooting-at-a-u-s-immigration-and-customs-enforcement-office-in-dallas-on-we
The body of a shooting suspect is placed in the medical examiners van near the scene of a shooting at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Dallas. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

#ICE: Two detainees were shot dead and one was wounded in a sniper attack at a US immigration facility in Dallas, the Department of Homeland Security said.

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#KIMMEL: Jimmy Kimmel has made his return to late-night television in the US after broadcasters facing pressure from US government regulators abruptly pulled it off the air last week.

#ESCALATORGATE: The White House launched an investigation after UN escalator stopped working when Trump stepped on.

PARTING SHOT

It’s one month to the day until voters head to the polls for the presidential election.

Lampposts will soon fill up with the names and faces of Áras hopefuls. But as the posters multiply, so does the debate around them: are they still necessary?

Some feel that the posters represent unnecessary waste and unsightly clutter. For others, they are considered an essential part of the election process.

So, take our poll and tell us your thoughts: Should election posters be banned? 

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A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.

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