Things have escalated very quickly for the NFL and the federal government with the Department of Justice reportedly opening an antitrust investigation against the country’s most popular sports league.
The Wall Street Journal reports that the government has begun an investigation on whether or not the league has “engaged in anticompetitive tactics that harm consumers.” However, the size and scope of the investigation are not yet known.
The DOJ investigation comes on the heels of building public pressure from other government officials. FCC chairman Brendan Carr, who has been very outspoken about wielding the weight of his office in ways not seen before, has recently turned his attention to the NFL.
Last month Carr openly questioned whether the NFL should still benefit from the antitrust elements of the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 after moving games to exclusive streaming partners.
The pressure comes as the NFL is set to renegotiate its current rights deals. The process is now well and truly underway with CBS and Paramount being purchased by Skydance and the Ellison family, triggering a change-of-ownership clause. The league is expecting at least a 50% increase in fees that could see their annual rights revenue reach $16 billion.
Given how active the Trump administration has been in protecting political friends and prosecuting political foes, it is quite the coincidence that the move to protect broadcast television comes with the Ellison and Murdoch family standing with the most to lose at CBS and Fox respectively. Both families are two of Donald Trump’s most prominent billionaire supporters.
However, the political pressure on the NFL and other sports leagues is not contained to one side of the political aisle. Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren has been a consistent voice arguing that rights fees and consumer costs are spiraling out of control. She sent her own letter to the FCC just this week about media consolidation making sporting events less accessible.
However, letters from senators and comments from the FCC are very different from an active DOJ investigation. That means it’s a whole new ballgame for the NFL and could stand as the biggest threat to their insurmountable media empire.
UPDATE: After news broke of the DOJ investigation, the NFL issued a statement to Awful Announcing.
“The NFL’s media distribution model is the most fan and broadcaster-friendly in the entire sports and entertainment industry. With over 87% of our games on free, broadcast television, including 100% of games in the markets of the competing teams, the NFL has for decades put our fans front and center in how we distribute our content. The 2025 season was our most viewed since 1989 and reflects the strength of the NFL distribution model and its wide availability to all fans.”
About Matt Yoder
Recent Posts
TV and streaming viewing picks for May 14, 2026: How to watch NFL schedule release
For the first time, the NFL regular season will be released in a simulcast on ESPN and NFL Network. Laura Rutledge hosts.
Jonathan Zaslow on 790 The Ticket, Dan Le Batard, Stugotz, Joy Taylor, and more
On this week’s episode of the Awful Announcing Podcast, Brandon Contes interviews longtime Miami sports media personality Jonathan...
Charles Barkley pays tribute to Jason Collins, says we still live in ‘homophobic society’
"Anybody who thinks we ain't got a bunch of gay players in all sports, they're just stupid."
Netflix reveals ‘Quarterback’ Season 3 roster
A quartet of quarterbacks at very different points in their NFL careers will feature in the new season of Netflix's documentary series.
NBA sweeps Top 10 sporting events in early May ratings
After being the source of debate all season, NBA ratings are dominating the sports landscape to begin the playoffs.
Seahawks-Patriots Super Bowl rematch to kick off 2026-27 NFL season
It's the first time the league has opened with a rematch of the prior year's Super Bowl since 2016.