Katie Miller, the spouse of White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller, is currently engaged in discussions with Paramount concerning a potential distribution agreement for her podcast, as reported by Axios.
Katie Miller's Podcast and Guests
Miller, who previously served under Mike Pence during the first Trump administration, has been broadcasting her program on YouTube since August 2025. The show features interviews with prominent supporters of President Donald Trump and the MAGA movement. Among her early guests was Vice President JD Vance, followed by figures such as boxing legend Mike Tyson, UFC CEO Dana White, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
Paramount's Podcast Expansion
Paramount is reportedly not only eyeing Miller's podcast but has also approached other podcasters and networks, including the Paragon Collective network, which hosts shows by Whitney Cummings and DL Hughley, and Jubilee Media, known for its viral debate content. It remains unclear whether Paramount will produce these shows or merely distribute them. Paramount's current roster includes the official UFC podcast 'Deep Waters,' 'The Drew Barrymore Show,' and numerous others.
Stephen Miller's Waning Influence
The potential boost to Katie Miller's podcast arrives amid reports that her husband's influence within the administration is diminishing. According to an article in The Atlantic, Stephen Miller has been sidelined on immigration policy, an area where he once held significant sway with Trump. Miller had advocated for deploying large Border Patrol units to sweep cities for illegal migrants, a strategy that led to two fatal shootings in Minneapolis earlier this year. On January 7, Renee Nicole Good was killed by ICE agent Jonathan Ross, and on January 24, Alex Pretti was killed by Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and CBP agent Raymundo Gutierrez, as revealed by ProPublica.
Following these incidents, Trump backed away from large-scale federal agent deployments and reversed a key Miller policy to cut seasonal worker visas by 50%, consulting border czar Tom Homan instead. The White House maintains that Miller remains a valued team member with a good relationship with Trump, though Trump once noted that Miller's views on immigration are more extreme than his own.
Miller is credited with pushing Congress to approve $175 billion for immigration enforcement, expanding ICE's capacity to hire officers, set up detention centers, and deport migrants. He set a target of 3,000 ICE arrests per day, aiming for 1 million deportations annually. However, as of January 20, 2026, the administration has conducted over 675,000 deportations, falling short of that goal.



