Texas Democrat James Talarico knew his Late Show interview would never make it to television before he boarded a plane to New York City.
Colbert’s producers told Talarico’s team days before the taping last month that CBS intended to post the conversation online only, according to the New York Times. The campaign chose silence, filming the segment anyway and betting that Colbert would frame the network’s decision as Trump administration censorship.
The gamble worked. The YouTube clip collected more than 9 million views, and Talarico saw a rush of new contributions. Internal polling conducted for rival Jasmine Crockett detected momentum shifting in his direction, the NYT reported. Campaign adviser Chuck Rocha told the paper, “A lot of that money we got in late from Colbert went to Spanish advertising.” (RELATED: Democrat Senate Candidate James Talarico Falsely Claims FCC ‘Refused To Air’ His Stephen Colbert Interview)
Colbert told a different story on air. He informed viewers that CBS lawyers had said “in no uncertain terms” that Talarico could not appear on the broadcast. CBS countered that the show received legal guidance about FCC equal-time requirements and independently opted to release the interview on YouTube, Fox News reported.
This is the interview Donald Trump didn’t want you to see.
His FCC refused to air my interview with Stephen Colbert.
Trump is worried we’re about to flip Texas. pic.twitter.com/BCev5jZbKc
— James Talarico (@jamestalarico) February 17, 2026
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr dismissed the entire episode as a “hoax.” “Yesterday was a perfect encapsulation of why the American people have more trust in gas station sushi than they do in the national news media,” Carr told reporters, according to Fox News.
Laura Ingraham pressed Carr on whether the sequence had been planned from the start. “Of course,” Carr answered, The Hill reported. Even Talarico’s primary opponent saw through it. Crockett told MS NOW the YouTube-only approach was “a good strategy” that “probably gave my opponent the boost he was looking for,” according to The Hill.
Talarico’s campaign touted a $2.5 million fundraising haul within 24 hours, describing the clip as his “censored” interview in a press release, Houston Public Media reported. He posted on social media calling it “the interview Donald Trump didn’t want you to see.” His representatives offered no explanation for why he attributed the decision to the Trump administration rather than CBS, according to the outlet.
Talarico defeated Crockett in the March 3 primary.
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