Donald Trump's shadow hangs over the call to kill a '60 Minutes' story
CBS News boss Bari Weiss pulled a "60 Minutes" story about the Trump administration and a brutal prison. Weiss says the story needs more work; critics think she did it to appease Trump or her owners. This is a feature, not a bug, of Trump 2.0, where the president takes an active role in the way media companies run. Ever since Bari Weiss arrived as the head of CBS News , people inside and outside the company have been waiting to see whether her politics - and those of CBS owner David Ellison - would show up in the journalism. This weekend, they may have gotten their answer. Or they may not have. And that uncertainty is the problem. It's possible Weiss had legitimate editorial concerns about a "60 Minutes" segment on the Trump administration's use of El Salvador's notorious CECOT prison. CBS pulled the segment abruptly before it was scheduled to air on Sunday evening. News organizations do periodically delay or spike stories. But the reported details around this decision make it hard to take the explanation entirely at face value. And Weiss's position - and the politics surrounding her appointment - mean that editorial calls like this one will always be read for hints of political bias. The segment, reported by Sharyn Alfonsi, had been promoted by CBS ahead of Sunday's broadcast and, according to multiple accounts , had cleared the network's standard internal processes. A few hours before airtime, CBS News announced that the segment needed additional reporting and editorial work. Alfonsi saw it differently. "In my view, pulling it now - after every rigorous internal check has been met is not an editorial decision, it is a political one," she wrote in a note to her co-workers . "We are trading 50 years of 'Gold Standard' reputation for a single week of political quiet." Weiss, meanwhile, told her staff Monday morning that she held the story because "it did not advance the ball," and because it didn't include on-camera comment from the Trump administration, which had sent hundreds of Venezuelans to the prison, where many were reportedly tortured. She had previously sent a memo to "60 Minutes" producers complaining that the report they'd made didn't provide viewers with "the full context they need to assess the story." There are two big problems with those arguments: 1) Making them so late in the process of a long-running investigation, shortly before the air date, is guaranteed to raise eyebrows. And 2) arguing that a story about the Trump administration can't air without on-camera participation from the Trump administration leads to a chilling endpoint: If the Trump administration doesn't want a story to run on "60 Minutes," it can kill it by not showing up on camera. Now, add in the environment Weiss stepped into. She arrived at CBS News through a deal engineered by Paramount's owners, the Ellison family, at a moment when the Ellison family is deeply enmeshed with the Trump administration. David Ellison's father, Larry, who...
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