CBS How Much is Your Soul? (CBS Fired 60min Scott Pelley, per Trump?)

Scott Pelley was fired a day after a tense meeting where he accused the CBS editor in chief, Bari Weiss, of “murdering ‘60 Minutes.’”(Credit...Michele Crowe/CBS, via Getty Images)

CBS Sold Itself To Trump and Agreed Trump Have aSayAs A Result They Fired Scott Pelley 60 Min

The Connection between Trump and CBS started when Trump sued CBS on a 60 Minutes piece that was Pulled (Shown in Canada). As many of Trump's law suit he never means to bring them to a jury but to get concessions by fear and get a written agreement. The agreement with CBS included hiring a Trump woman who took an  overseer position with CBS News Including 60 Minutes.
Say what you want about Trump but he got The Supreme Court, Congress and the biggest of the Media 3, CBS. That is real power even if he wasn't a President. The people that voted for him are 100% responsible but Companies counting how many dollars this will cost opposite that. are also responsible. The thing is the Media is suppose to write and Print what ever is the truth about how politicians rule and the misuses of The policing apparatus(Ice, FBI, Fed law enforcement). CBS did not have to settled but they figured it would be cheaper which it wasn't, going with Trump is never cheaper on the long run. I ask The media,
How much would you sell your soul for?
Adam Gonzalez, publisher




New York Times 
 

CBS News fired Scott Pelley on Tuesday, jettisoning one of the network’s best-known journalists in a clash over the future of “60 Minutes,” the country’s top-rated news program.

Mr. Pelley, 68, a “60 Minutes” correspondent and a former anchor of “CBS Evening News,” joined the network in 1989. At a staff meeting on Monday, he accused the network’s editor in chief, Bari Weiss, of “murdering ‘60 Minutes,’” citing the ouster last week of the program’s leadership team and two on-air correspondents.

“We have parted ways with Scott Pelley,” Nick Bilton, the tech journalist who was hired last week as the new “60 Minutes” executive producer, wrote in a memo to the show’s staff on Tuesday night.

CBS News declined to comment. In a formal letter to Mr. Pelley, which was obtained by The New York Times, Mr. Bilton wrote that the correspondent had been “terminated for cause effective immediately.” 

Mr. Pelley, in a telephone interview on Tuesday evening shortly after he was fired, said he had devoted decades of his life to “60 Minutes,” which he said he still cared about deeply.

“I have been in combat in Afghanistan,” Mr. Pelley said. “I have been in combat in Iraq. I have been in the war zone in Ukraine multiple times, risking my life and the happiness of my family because of my devotion to the broadcast.”

The firing of Mr. Pelley is among the most consequential moves of Ms. Weiss’s rocky tenure at CBS. And it is almost certain to spike tensions that have coursed through the network for months.

It also raises the stakes of Ms. Weiss’s surprising decision to replace the entire leadership team at “60 Minutes,” CBS News’s most successful franchise, and hire Mr. Bilton, who has no experience in broadcast TV, to oversee the show. The program’s viewership was up 9 percent this past season from a year prior, and the show is routinely among the nation’s highest-rated weekly broadcasts, according to Nielsen. 
Bari Weiss, the editor in chief of CBS News, at an event in 2024.Credit...Noam Galai/Getty Images for The Free Press
This Soulless Woman the Trump followe
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Nick Bilton was hired last week by Ms. Weiss as the new executive producer of “60 Minutes.”Credit...Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images


Those viewers are accustomed to familiar faces like Mr. Pelley, who has contributed to the program since 2004. The “60 Minutes” staff prides itself on autonomy, and it is not clear how the show’s production team may react to the firing of Mr. Pelley. 

At the staff meeting on Monday, which Ms. Weiss did not attend, Mr. Pelley repeatedly pressed Mr. Bilton about the network’s decision to fire Tanya Simon, the show’s previous executive producer. He also told Mr. Bilton that he had “slender” qualifications to oversee the show and that he would “never be welcome” at “60 Minutes.”

In his letter to Mr. Pelley on Tuesday, Mr. Bilton expressed his deep frustration with those remarks.

“You hijacked my first meeting with staff to disparage me, my qualifications, and my intentions with remarkable incivility and contempt,” Mr. Bilton wrote. He called it a “performative display of hostility” that “demonstrated that you have no interest in contributing to the future success of the show.”
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A black-and-white photo of several people in suits holding microphones in a formal room.
Mr. Pelley, second from right, preparing to deliver live reports alongside other White House correspondents in 1998.Credit...Getty Images 

Mr. Pelley, asked about the letter in the interview on Tuesday evening, said Mr. Bilton’s missive “betrays a complete misunderstanding of what we work for and what we live for at ‘60 Minutes.’”

Earlier on Tuesday, Mr. Pelley sent a statement to The Times that assailed the new leadership of CBS News, writing that “incompetence and unprofessionalism in the new management have wreaked havoc” at the network.” He added, “The collapse of values at the top has become untenable.”

Mr. Pelley also wrote that senior managers at CBS News had pressured him to insert bias into stories for “60 Minutes” this past season, though he did not provide details about specific segments.

Mr. Bilton must now take charge of a weekly program that has lost four of its on-air correspondents in the past month. Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega were fired last week, and Anderson Cooper voluntarily left the show at the end of the season in May.

Ms. Weiss was appointed last year by CBS’s owner, the tech scion David Ellison, with a mandate to revamp the news division for the digital era. An opinion journalist with little experience in broadcast television, Ms. Weiss was also a longtime critic of the legacy media. 

Her early interactions with the “60 Minutes” staff led to some awkwardness. In a meeting in October, Ms. Weiss bluntly asked the show’s journalists why the country believed they were biased. In December, she pulled a segment about a Salvadoran prison shortly before it aired, saying it needed more reporting. Ms. Alfonsi, the correspondent, accused Ms. Weiss of a “political” move. (The segment later aired in full, with additional comments from the Trump administration.)

Mr. Pelley’s future had seemed up in the air since his standoff with Mr. Bilton on Monday.

Eight people stand in front of a blue backdrop in a television studio. Some are standing while others are sitting on chairs or leaning on props.
The “60 Minutes” team in 2023. From left, Sharyn Alfonsi, Jon Wertheim, Bill Whitaker, Lesley Stahl, Mr. Pelley, Cecilia Vega, Anderson Cooper and Bill Owens.Credit...Jai Lennard/CBS NEWS, via Associated Press

Leaders at CBS News set a meeting with Mr. Pelley on Tuesday intending to find a path forward after Monday’s fireworks. But the meeting turned contentious and ended with no clear resolution, according to three people with knowledge of the private gathering. In attendance were Mr. Pelley, Ms. Weiss, Mr. Bilton and Tom Cibrowski, the president of CBS News.

Mr. Pelley said in the interview that Ms. Weiss would not answer his questions about why the network had decided to fire Ms. Simon, Ms. Alfonsi and Ms. Vega.

Ms. Weiss’s behavior, he said, “was cold and callous and beneath the dignity of CBS News.”

After his meeting on Tuesday, Mr. Pelley said, he returned to the “60 Minutes” offices. Staff members had gathered, awaiting word of his fate, but hours passed with no answer. He eventually urged the staff to return home, then left the building himself.

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