To carry or not to carry Trump's address?

That was the question for many networks on Monday, after the president announced he would be addressing the nation Tuesday night at 9:00 pm ET on the government shutdown.

I am pleased to inform you that I will Address the Nation on the Humanitarian and National Security crisis on our Southern Border. Tuesday night at 9:00 P.M. Eastern. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 7, 2019

Talk about getting boxed in with no easy solution. The Catch-22 for all the networks was this: Don't carry it, and that network will be accused by the right and by Trump of taking sides. Just more bias against the president, they'd say.

From the left, it's the political version of opposite day: Why would the networks allow propaganda to be shown without a filter? Who will stop him from lying? Why should the airwaves be used as a political tool?

"Donald Trump takes his immigration propaganda to prime time tomorrow. He's asked for network time to address the nation about the govt shutdown...OF HIS OWN MAKING... a blatant effort to distract from stories he fears, the Mueller probe and his ties to Russia"- @NicolleDWallace pic.twitter.com/3bASEydcll — Deadline White House (@DeadlineWH) January 7, 2019 1. Trump lied to the public about past presidents saying they wished they'd built a border wall.



2. Trump is asking for public airtime to make a nationally televised address on the border wall.



Trump shouldn't be given free airtime simply to lie to the public. https://t.co/EpTekpDB52 — Ezra Klein (@ezraklein) January 7, 2019

We also saw reports of cable executives complaining about Trump calling them "fake news" while simultaneously asking for their cable pipes to get a false narrative out to the American people. This is the very best unintentional comedy because of the utter hypocrisy of it all. Need we remind what cable news looked like, for an almost-daily basis for the last half of 2015 and a good chunk of 2016 during the primaries?

Here's a refresher.

So the next time you hear about conservative media like Drudge being the reason Trump was elected, be sure not to laugh too hard. Bottom line is that Trump was great for all the networks' bottom lines, great for ratings, great for exploding ad revenue. And the best part? He made presenting the news so easy: Just point the camera at a podium, even if the featured speaker isn't there, and put the whole thing on cruise control while seeing the numbers shoot up on Nielsen reports. If Trump so much as sneezed, it was considered "BREAKING NEWS!"

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Of course, the geniuses and powerful people on camera running said networks never thought a real estate mogul and reality star with zero political experience would ever actually, you know, win. So they kept giving him all the airtime he could ever need while turning his opponents — first, the 17 on the Republican side, and then the Democratic nominee — virtually invisible as it pertained to actually showing one of their speeches live.

Oh, yes, the networks certainly didn't take the kind of pious stand against candidate Trump around airtime that we're hearing so much about now, did they?

The Atlanta Journal Constitution analysis noted of Trump's primary campaign, "in interviews, more than a dozen anchors, executives and news producers displayed admiration for Mr. Trump’s facility with their medium,"

"Some expressed a bit of soul-searching, admitting unease at the unfiltered exposure he has received, with one anchor describing frustration about being asked to conduct on-air interviews with Mr. Trump by telephone, rather than in person. But several offered the defense that whatever viewers make of Mr. Trump, he is undoubtedly newsworthy — and always accessible," the analysis concluded.