President Trump hits back at late night shows critical of Republicans
President Donald Trump lashed out Saturday against late night television show hosts who have been sharply critical of his administration and Republicans.
President Trump took to Twitter to argue that the GOP should be given "equal time" because of the "one-sided" coverage, an apparent reference to Federal Communications Commission rules dealing with political candidates during elections.
"Late Night host(s) are dealing with the Democrats for their very 'unfunny' & repetitive material, always anti-Trump!" he tweeted. "Should we get Equal Time?"
President Trump also suggested "more and more people" are clamoring for more coverage of Republicans, who control the White House and Congress.
Seth Myers, who has been among the most vocal President Trump critics, immediately tweeted back that he'd "love" to have President Trump on his NBC show. Myers jokingly provided his studio address as "15 Penguin Avenue, Antarctica."
Others on Twitter pointed out to the president that "equal time" is meant for campaign season, not to protect elected officials from being the butt of television humor.
"That's not how it works. You're not campaigning. You're the president," Mike DiCenzo, a writer and producer for NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon," tweeted . "Now kindly stop tweeting nonsense and go do your job for once."
The FCC rule says political candidates should be treated equally by broadcast television stations when it comes to selling or giving away air time during an election. Over the years, the commission has broadly exempted news programs, including late night talk shows, from the provision.
President Trump's tweets followed shortly after a segment on Fox News' "Fox and Friends" that said many late show hosts have taken "a hard turn to the left."
The president's reference to "dealing with Democrats" appears to allude to recent reports by Fox and others that ABC's Jimmy Kimmel consulted with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, before delivering a series of emotional and personal monologues against Republicans' attempts to repeal and replace the health care law that was championed by former President Barack Obama.
Kimmel's son, Billy, who was born this year with a congenital heart defect, a pre-existing condition the late night host argued would have prevented the boy from getting health insurance if not for the Affordable Care Act that Obama signed in 2010.
President Trump's ire for his late night critics— who also include CBS' Stephen Colbert and even Fallon at times — is not totally unfounded.
A study by researchers at George Mason University in Virginia found that President Trump in on pace to "easily eclipse" the most jokes about any person tracked by its Center for Media and Public Affairs since it began monitoring in 1988.
The New York billionaire was the target of more than 1,000 jokes during his first 100 days in office, surpassing the 936 jokes made at Obama's expense in his first year in office in 2009 and more than the 546 about George W. Bush in his first year as president in 2001, according to the study.