Teamsters, Fuse, Center for American Rights Push for Conditions on Skydance/Paramount
Conservative group the Center for American Rights has joined with Fuse Media and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters in asking the FCC to “avoid rubber-stamping Skydance’s proposed $8 billion acquisition of Paramount Global and hold Skydance accountable for keeping its…
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public interest commitments,” according to a joint ex parte filing Tuesday. CAR President Daniel Suhr and attorney David Goodfriend -- who represents Fuse and the Teamsters -- met with Commissioner Nathan Simington, acting Media Bureau Chief Erin Boone, and aides to Commissioners Geoffrey Starks and Anna Gomez in a call Tuesday. “Each of us filed comments addressing very different issues in this transaction but with the same goal: making sure that Skydance lives up to statements it made to the FCC,” said the filing. CAR and Goodfriend’s clients said they believe Skydance should provide more details to the agency and be held accountable, the filing said. Both groups in the ex parte filing listed possible conditions the FCC should impose on Skydance. CAR, which filed the news distortion complaint against CBS, wants Skydance held to commitments on unbiased news and said the FCC should require more viewpoint diversity on the New Paramount board, editorial staff located in cities besides New York and Los Angeles, and a well-funded oversight board or ombudsman. The Teamsters and Fuse want the agency to require collective bargaining agreements with all employees and reserve programming services on PlutoTV and other streaming platforms for independently owned content providers.