On January 6, Turkish editorial priorities shifted toward domestic digital regulation as the government announced a legislative bid to ban social media for children under 15. The morning cycle focused on Minister Göktaş’s statement that the bill would reach Parliament by month's end, a story that gained rapid traction across both pro-government and independent outlets. Concurrently, editors tracked the deepening legal drama surrounding Nicolás Maduro’s detention in New York, with nationalist sources like Aydınlık and MHP leader Devlet Bahçeli framing the U.S. operation as "piracy" and "banditry." By early afternoon, the narrative landscape diversified. President Erdoğan’s announcement of a new employment package—promising state-funded salaries for young workers—competed for space with reports of a massive anti-money laundering raid in Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar. The evening news was dominated by internal security updates, specifically Defense Minister Güler’s call for the disarmament of PKK/YPG forces in Syria and the arrival of Malaysia’s Prime Minister in Ankara.