NBC found itself in hot water after Kamala Harris made a surprise appearance on Saturday Night Live just days before Election Day. Initially, SNL producer Lorne Michaels had vowed to steer clear of featuring presidential candidates, citing the FCC’s Equal Time rule, which mandates that broadcasters give comparable airtime to all qualified candidates in the final days before an election. Yet there was Harris, delivering a last-minute pitch to viewers, and it sparked immediate controversy and legal concerns.
The Equal Time rule exists to prevent broadcasters from giving one candidate an unfair advantage by using public airwaves for partisan gain. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr wasted no time highlighting the implications of Harris’s appearance, calling it a “clear and blatant effort to evade” election law. Carr pointed out that NBC’s failure to offer comparable time to other candidates was not only biased but also, in his view, illegal.
The Equal Time rule isn’t some obscure, rarely enforced regulation. In 2016, when then-candidate Trump appeared on SNL, Obama’s FCC Chair took steps to ensure other candidates had the option to receive equal airtime. Similar action was taken when Hillary Clinton made her own SNL cameo. Yet, in a last-minute 180, NBC allowed Harris on the show just hours before the election, effectively bypassing the law’s requirements by denying other candidates the full seven-day window to request equal airtime.
Now, NBC is scrambling to comply. In response, Trump’s campaign demanded equal airtime, leading NBC to air one of his campaign ads during Sunday’s NASCAR coverage and the post-game slot of Sunday Night Football. Dressed in his red MAGA cap, Trump used his two minutes to warn viewers that electing Harris would bring “depression” to the nation, urging Americans to choose wisely at the polls.
????BREAKING: NBC forced to allow Trump to air a free 90 second advertisement during Sunday Night Football and NASCAR per FCC regulations in order to provide equal time to Kamala Harris’ SNL appearance.
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) November 4, 2024
The timing of Harris’s appearance raises even more questions. SNL’s decision to break its own policy of barring candidates, especially when FCC rules mandate a week’s window for equal time requests, certainly seems like a calculated move. Instead of honoring that procedural right, NBC gave other candidates a last-minute ultimatum—either respond instantly or miss out on the same national exposure Harris received.
This episode illustrates just how much media influence and election law can clash during critical election cycles. SNL may have been aiming for laughs, but its decision created a serious legal storm, putting NBC in the position of scrambling to stay on the right side of the law just days before voters head to the polls. For now, Trump has his equal time, but the broader impact on public trust in media fairness is another question altogether.